Edinburgh is one of the UK's strongest cities for business, with GDP per capita exceeding £69,000, a highly educated workforce, a growing technology sector, and a strong base of financial services, tourism, and life sciences. Costs and business rates are lower than London, and support organisations including Business Gateway and Edinburgh Chamber of Commerce provide practical help for new and growing businesses.
Whether you are setting up your first business, relocating to Edinburgh from another UK city, or looking to grow a company that already has roots here, understanding how Edinburgh works commercially will save you considerable time and money.
This guide covers the practical realities: the economy, support bodies, the business environment, costs, and how to build a network in the city.
Edinburgh has consistently ranked as one of the top cities in the UK for economic performance. Its GDP per capita which has been reported as exceeding £69,000, putting it ahead of London on this measure reflects a high value services economy built on financial services, technology, tourism, education, and life sciences.
The city attracts significant foreign direct investment. In recent years, Edinburgh has seen dozens of new FDI-funded developments spanning sectors from renewable energy to retail, creating employment and commercial opportunity across the city.
Practically speaking, Edinburgh is also more affordable than London for businesses. Office rents, staff costs, and business rates tend to be materially lower, while quality of life metrics which affect your ability to recruit and retain staff are strong. The city consistently features in quality of life indices for European cities.
Edinburgh is the second-largest financial centre in the UK after London, home to major asset managers, insurance firms, and banking institutions. If your business serves this sector whether in technology, compliance, marketing, or professional services, you are operating in a large and established market.
Edinburgh's technology sector has grown significantly over the past decade, anchored partly by the University of Edinburgh and its strong computer science and data science reputation, and partly by the growth of companies in fintech, AI, and software development. The tech ecosystem has a distinct startup culture centred around areas like Leith and the New Town.
Edinburgh is one of Europe's most visited cities, drawing millions of visitors annually and hosting major festivals including the Fringe, the International Festival, and Science Festival. This creates strong commercial opportunity for hospitality, events, retail, and service businesses that can capture tourist spend or provide services to events businesses.
The presence of the University of Edinburgh one of the world's top research universities alongside Heriot-Watt, Napier, and Queen Margaret University creates a concentration of knowledge and talent. Life sciences businesses have access to strong research partnerships and a skilled graduate pool.
The main business support organisations in Edinburgh include Business Gateway (free advice and workshops for new businesses), Edinburgh Chamber of Commerce (membership, events, and networking), Scottish Enterprise (support for scaling businesses), and the Federation of Small Businesses (advocacy and practical support for small businesses).
Business Gateway is the publicly funded business advice service available across Scotland. It provides free advice, workshops, and one-to-one mentoring for people starting or growing businesses. For anyone in the early stages of setting up in Edinburgh, Business Gateway should be one of the first ports of call.
Scottish Enterprise supports ambitious Scottish businesses looking to scale significantly. If your business has growth ambitions beyond the local market; international expansion, significant job creation, or innovation investment; Scottish Enterprise can provide funding, connections, and strategic support.
If your business is based outside the central belt, these two development agencies provide equivalent support to Scottish Enterprise for their respective regions.
The Edinburgh Chamber supports over 1,000 member organisations and hosts over 120 B2B events per year. It is particularly strong for businesses wanting to engage with city-level networks, local government stakeholders, and larger commercial organisations.
One of the distinctive features of doing business in Edinburgh compared with larger cities is that the business community is relatively connected. Edinburgh is large enough to have significant commercial depth but small enough that relationships matter, and that you can genuinely know a meaningful proportion of the business community in your sector over time.
This makes networking a higher-return activity in Edinburgh than in, say, London where the city is simply too large for relationships to develop in the same way.
Edinburgh's networking landscape includes:
Many Edinburgh business owners belong to more than one group. A common pattern is to use a community group for relationship-building and peer support, and a more structured group for active referral generation.
Edinburgh has a well-developed flexible workspace market. Spaces such as Codebase (for technology companies), WeWork, and a range of independent co-working spaces across the city provide options from hot-desking to private offices. The city centre, Leith, and the West End are particularly well served.
Edinburgh is well connected by rail (with direct services to London, Glasgow, Aberdeen, and Inverness), by air from Edinburgh Airport, and by the Edinburgh Trams network. Within the city, trams and buses serve most business districts, though city centre parking is limited and expensive.
Scottish business rates are set separately from England. The Small Business Bonus Scheme provides rates relief for eligible smaller businesses, potentially reducing the rates bill to zero for businesses with a rateable value below the qualifying threshold. It is worth checking eligibility with the City of Edinburgh Council or a commercial property adviser.
If you are new to doing business in Edinburgh, the most valuable thing you can do early is invest in your network. Edinburgh rewards relationship-based business development, and the people you meet in year one often become clients, collaborators, or sources of referral for years afterwards.
Connections breakfasts and larger evening events in Edinburgh city centre. First visit is free.