Calculate the ideal standing desk, monitor, and keyboard heights based on your body measurements for ergonomic comfort.
An improperly set standing desk causes more harm than good — back pain, neck strain, wrist problems, and fatigue that defeats the entire purpose of standing while working. The ideal standing desk height places your elbows at a 90-100° angle, your monitor at eye level, and your wrists in a neutral position. These dimensions vary significantly with your height.
Our Standing Desk Height Calculator uses your height (with optional shoe height) to compute the optimal desk surface height, keyboard tray position, monitor center height, and monitor arm placement. It also calculates your correct seated desk height for sit-stand desks, so you can program both presets accurately.
Beyond basic height, the calculator factors in monitor size and distance, keyboard tilt preferences, and whether you use a standing mat (which adds about 0.5-1 inch to effective height). Get a complete ergonomic setup diagram with all measurements personalized to your body.
Use the preset examples to check common body heights, or type in custom inputs to get a desk setup matched to your own measurements.
Use this calculator when you want a standing desk setup based on your actual body measurements instead of a guess. It helps you set desk, monitor, and keyboard heights that reduce strain in both standing and seated positions. That makes it easier to tune the desk once instead of constantly readjusting it.
Standing Desk Height = Elbow Height (standing) ≈ Height × 0.63 + shoe_height + mat_height. Monitor Center = Eye Height ≈ Height × 0.94 + shoe + mat. Keyboard Tray = Desk Height - 2 in (if separate tray). Seated Desk Height = Elbow Height (seated) ≈ Seat Height + (Height × 0.186). Monitor Distance = diagonal × 1.5 to 2.5.
Result: Standing desk: 45.6 in, Monitor center: 67.3 in, Seated desk: 28.5 in
At 5'10" (70 in) with 1-inch shoes and a standing mat (+0.75 in), the optimal desk surface is 45.6 inches, monitor center at 67.3 inches, and when seated, the desk should lower to 28.5 inches.
Standing desks reduce sedentary time, but poor setup negates benefits. The three critical measurements are: desk surface height (determines arm posture), monitor height (determines neck posture), and keyboard position (determines wrist posture). All three must be correct simultaneously for ergonomic benefit.
The typical difference between seated and standing desk heights is 15-20 inches. Electric sit-stand desks with memory presets let you switch instantly. Manual crank desks should be measured carefully for both positions and marked.
A monitor arm is the single best accessory for a standing desk. It allows independent height, distance, and tilt adjustment regardless of desk height. For dual monitors, ensure each is at the same height and angled slightly inward (10-20°).
Your standing desk should place your elbows at a 90-100° angle. For most people, this is roughly 63% of their standing height. Fine-tuning a little up or down is normal once you test the setup.
The top of your monitor should be at or slightly below eye level, with the center of the screen about 15-20° below your horizontal line of sight. That keeps your neck in a more neutral position.
Yes, significantly. A 1-inch heel effectively raises your required desk height by 1 inch. Barefoot users need a lower desk setting. Measure in the shoes you actually wear at the desk.
Anti-fatigue mats compress to about 0.5-1 inch under body weight, effectively adding that to your standing height. That small difference can change the final desk setting more than people expect.
Research suggests a 1:1 to 2:1 sit-to-stand ratio. Start with 20-30 minutes standing per hour and increase gradually. The best mix is the one you can keep without fatigue.
Typically 20-40 inches (an arm's length). Larger monitors should be farther away. A 27" monitor works well at 25-30 inches. The goal is clear text without leaning forward. If you catch yourself leaning in, move the screen back. Glare and font size can justify small adjustments. Comfort at your usual posture is the real target. A slightly farther screen is usually kinder to your neck. The best distance is the one that keeps you from tilting your head forward. Small changes usually beat a complete height reset.