Inside El Gouna’s Regus: A New Work Rhythm by the Water
Regus opens its latest flexible workspace in El Gouna, offering entrepreneurs and remote teams a thoughtfully designed space to work, meet, and grow within one of Egypt’s most serene towns.

It’s 10 AM in El Gouna, and someone is pitching an investor over coffee with a view of the marina. Two tables over, a fintech founder is onboarding a new hire remotely. Upstairs, a wellness entrepreneur is prepping the itinerary for her retreat. It’s Tuesday at Regus El Gouna.
Set in the calm precision of Fanadir Marina, the newest Regus location doesn’t just offer desks and WiFi but a shift in perspective. For founders, creatives, and teams working remotely, it’s the kind of place that makes space not only for productivity, but for the pace you want your life to move at.
The interiors are minimal, light-filled, and intentionally designed to get you into flow. Private offices, co-working lounges, meeting rooms and breakout areas are all arranged with the understanding that work happens in different modes. Some days are for quiet focus. Others need room for collaboration. Here, both are built in.
This is Regus’ 18th location in Egypt, and one of the very few outside of Cairo. But El Gouna isn’t an outpost. It’s a living model for integrated work-life environments, where business infrastructure meets coastal ease, and no one’s rushing through gridlock to get to a 9 AM call.
There’s a reason El Gouna feels like it was made for this moment. It has schools, cultural centers, clinics, fitness hubs, and food that rivals any city restaurant scene, all connected by bike and walking paths, clean air, and a community that actually knows each other’s names.
Professionals here aren’t stepping away from ambition. They’re just recalibrating how and where that ambition unfolds. And spaces like Regus El Gouna offer the architecture to support that recalibration, practical, polished, and embedded within a town that rewards momentum without forcing speed.
The hybrid model doesn’t need explaining anymore. What it needs is better places to land. At Fanadir Marina, one just opened its doors.
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