The No-Nonsense Home Office Setup Guide
I've built and rebuilt my home office more times than I'd like to admit. Along the way I wasted money on things that looked great in product photos and did nothing for my back, my eyes, or my focus. This guide is the shortcut I wish I'd had: what actually matters, broken down by how much you're willing to spend.
The core idea is simple. Spend the most on the things your body touches for eight hours a day — your chair and your desk — and the things your eyes stare at. Everything else is a rounding error by comparison. If your budget is tight, buy fewer things but buy the right ones.
The desk
A desk has one job: put your work surface at the right height and hold steady while you type. Wobble is the enemy. If your desk shakes every time you rest your wrists, you'll feel it in your shoulders by mid-afternoon.
- Budget (under $150): A solid fixed-height desk from IKEA or a basic flat-pack model does the job if you're the right height for it. Add a stable crossbar if the legs feel flimsy.
- Mid (150–400): A single-motor sit-stand frame. Being able to stand for even 20 minutes an hour changes how the day feels. Look for a frame rated for more weight than you think you need — stability scales with the rating.
- Premium (400+): A dual-motor standing desk with memory presets. The Uplift V2 and Fully Jarvis class of desks are the ones people keep for a decade. This is where the extra money is genuinely justified.
The chair
This is the one place I tell people to spend more than feels reasonable. You are sitting in this thing for thousands of hours. A $60 chair from a big-box store will feel fine for a week and then quietly wreck your lower back.
- Budget: Buy used. A five-year-old Herman Miller or Steelcase chair off the second-hand market beats almost any new budget chair. These are built to last 12+ years, so a used one still has most of its life left.
- Mid: A new ergonomic chair with adjustable lumbar support, seat depth, and armrests. If it doesn't adjust in at least those three ways, keep looking.
- Premium: A new Steelcase Leap or Herman Miller Aeron. Try before you buy if you possibly can — bodies differ, and the "best" chair is the one that fits yours.
The monitor
Screen real estate is productivity you can see. Going from a laptop screen to a proper monitor is the single biggest quality-of-life jump for most people working from home.
- Budget: A 24–27" 1080p IPS panel. Perfectly usable. Prioritise a matte finish so you're not fighting glare from your window.
- Mid: A 27" 1440p monitor. This is the sweet spot for text sharpness versus price, and it's where I tell most people to land.
- Premium: A 4K panel at 27–32", or a 34" ultrawide if you juggle a lot of windows. Ultrawides replace a dual-monitor setup and look cleaner doing it.
Whatever you buy, get it on a monitor arm. Raising the top of the screen to eye level does more for neck pain than any gadget, and an arm frees up desk space underneath.
Lighting
Lighting is the most underrated part of a home office. Bad lighting causes eye strain and shows up terribly on video calls. You don't need a studio — you need to not be lit by a single harsh overhead bulb.
- A bias light behind your monitor reduces the contrast between a bright screen and a dark wall, which cuts eye fatigue at night.
- A desk lamp with adjustable colour temperature lets you go warm in the evening and cool during the day.
- For calls, a small key light pointed at your face — or just sitting so a window is in front of you, not behind — makes you look professional for almost no money.
Peripherals
Keyboard, mouse, and audio are personal, but a few rules hold. A good keyboard makes typing pleasant rather than a chore. A mouse should fit your hand and not force your wrist into a claw. And a cheap USB microphone or a decent headset will make you sound dramatically better on calls than any laptop mic.
- Keyboard: Mechanical if you type all day; a quiet tactile switch if you share the room.
- Mouse: Ergonomic or vertical if you get wrist pain; otherwise whatever feels natural.
- Audio: A standalone mic beats a headset mic for meetings; noise-cancelling headphones help if you don't control the room's noise.
What to skip
Plenty of "productivity" gear is decoration. You can happily ignore RGB everything, foot hammocks, novelty desk mats, and most cable-management kits — a handful of velcro ties does the same job for a few dollars. Buy those things later, for fun, once the fundamentals are sorted.
The bottom line
A great home office isn't about the most expensive gear. It's about putting your money where your body and your eyes spend the most time, and refusing to be upsold on the rest. Get the chair right, get the screen to eye level, light the room decently, and you'll have a workspace that holds up for years — whatever your budget was on day one.