Desk Ergonomic Checklist

Assesses desk setup for ergonomic risks: chair height, monitor position, keyboard/mouse placement, lighting, movement breaks, upgrade prioritization.

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Desk Ergonomic Checklist

Safety Boundary

This skill offers practical, self-assessment guidance for optimizing desk setups. It is informational only and does not constitute medical, physiotherapy, or occupational health advice. If you experience persistent pain, numbness, tingling, or have a diagnosed musculoskeletal condition, consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes.

When to Use / When Not to Use

Use this skill when you want to:

  • Evaluate your current desk setup for common ergonomic risk factors.
  • Make low-cost adjustments to improve comfort during long desk hours.
  • Prioritize which equipment upgrades will have the biggest impact.
  • Build movement breaks into your workday.

Do not use this skill to:

  • Diagnose or treat repetitive strain injury (RSI), carpal tunnel syndrome, or back disorders.
  • Replace personalized assessment from an ergonomist, physiotherapist, or occupational health specialist.
  • Ignore pain or warning signs that require medical attention.

The Six Checkpoints

1. Chair & Seat Position

Checklist:

  • Feet rest flat on the floor or on a footrest.
  • Knees are at approximately 90–110 degrees.
  • Thighs are parallel to the floor or slightly angled down.
  • Lower back is supported by the chair's lumbar support or a small cushion.
  • You can sit back fully without perching on the edge.

Quick Fixes:

  • If feet dangle, add a footrest or stack books.
  • If lumbar support is missing, roll a small towel and place it at the small of your back.
  • If the chair is too deep, add a cushion behind you to reduce seat depth.

Upgrade Priority: High — the chair is your primary support surface.

2. Monitor Position & Eye Level

Checklist:

  • Top of the screen is at or slightly below eye level.
  • Screen is approximately an arm's length away (50–70 cm / 20–28 inches).
  • Screen is directly in front of you, not off to one side.
  • You are not tilting your head up or down to view the screen.
  • Text is large enough to read without leaning forward or squinting.

Quick Fixes:

  • Raise the monitor with books, a box, or a dedicated monitor stand.
  • Lower the monitor if your neck is extended upward.
  • Increase text scaling/zoom in your operating system.
  • For laptops: use an external keyboard and raise the laptop screen to eye level.

Upgrade Priority: High — monitor position drives neck posture.

3. Keyboard & Mouse Placement

Checklist:

  • Keyboard is positioned so elbows stay at approximately 90 degrees.
  • Wrists are straight (not bent up, down, or sideways) when typing.
  • Mouse is at the same height and distance as the keyboard.
  • You are not reaching forward or to the side for the mouse.
  • Shoulders are relaxed, not hunched or elevated.

Quick Fixes:

  • Move the keyboard closer so your elbows stay near your torso.
  • If the keyboard has feet, keep them flat to reduce wrist extension.
  • Place the mouse directly beside the keyboard, not above or far to the side.
  • Consider a wrist rest for padding during pauses, not while actively typing.

Upgrade Priority: Medium — adjustments often solve issues without new hardware.

4. Lighting & Glare

Checklist:

  • No direct light source (window or lamp) shines directly into your eyes.
  • No bright light is directly reflected on the screen.
  • The room has balanced ambient lighting; neither too dark nor overly bright.
  • Task lighting is available for paperwork, separate from screen lighting.
  • You are not working in a completely dark room with only the screen on.

Quick Fixes:

  • Close blinds or reposition the monitor perpendicular to windows.
  • Adjust screen brightness to match ambient light levels.
  • Use a desk lamp with a diffused shade for paper tasks.
  • Enable night mode / blue-light reduction in the evening if it helps your comfort.

Upgrade Priority: Low — usually fixable with positioning and settings.

5. Movement & Breaks

Checklist:

  • You stand up or change position at least once every 30–60 minutes.
  • You perform brief stretches for neck, shoulders, wrists, and back during breaks.
  • You vary tasks throughout the day (typing, calls, reading, walking).
  • You take a micro-break (20–30 seconds) every 10 minutes if doing intensive mouse/keyboard work.

Quick Break Routine (2 minutes):

  1. Stand up and roll shoulders backward 5 times.
  2. Gently tilt head side to side, holding 10 seconds each.
  3. Extend arms forward, open and close fists 10 times.
  4. Walk to get water or look out a window for 30 seconds.
  5. Sit back down with fresh posture awareness.

Upgrade Priority: Critical — no setup replaces movement.

6. Workspace Environment

Checklist:

  • Desk height allows forearms to rest parallel to the floor.
  • There is enough clearance under the desk for knees and legs.
  • Frequently used items (phone, notepad) are within easy reach.
  • Cables are managed to avoid awkward reaching or tripping.
  • Temperature and airflow are comfortable (not too hot, cold, or drafty).

Quick Fixes:

  • If the desk is too high, raise your chair and add a footrest.
  • If the desk is too low, consider desk risers or a different desk.
  • Keep the top third of the desk clear for forearm support.

Scoring Your Setup

Count your checked boxes across all six checkpoints:

ScoreAssessmentAction
20–25ExcellentMaintain and continue regular breaks.
14–19GoodAddress unchecked items with quick fixes.
8–13Needs ImprovementPrioritize high-impact changes (chair, monitor).
0–7High RiskMake immediate adjustments; consider professional assessment if pain exists.

Upgrade Prioritization Guide

If you can invest in one improvement at a time:

  1. Chair with adjustable lumbar support and armrests — biggest impact on spinal health.
  2. External monitor or laptop stand + keyboard — fixes neck posture for laptop users.
  3. Adjustable desk (sit-stand) — enables position variation throughout the day.
  4. Ergonomic keyboard or vertical mouse — helpful if you experience wrist or forearm discomfort.
  5. Monitor arm — fine-tunes monitor position and frees desk space.
  6. Footrest, wrist rest, cable management — low-cost finishing touches.

Pain Warning Signs — Seek Professional Help

Consult a medical or physiotherapy professional if you experience:

  • Persistent wrist, hand, or forearm pain, numbness, or tingling.
  • Neck or back pain that does not improve with setup changes.
  • Headaches that correlate with screen time and do not respond to breaks.
  • Any symptoms that worsen over time or interfere with sleep or daily activities.

Daily Quick Check (30 seconds)

Before starting work:

  1. Feet flat? Back supported?
  2. Screen at eye level? Arm's length away?
  3. Shoulders relaxed? Wrists straight?
  4. Next break planned?

Differentiation: Provides a structured six-checkpoint assessment with quick fixes and upgrade prioritization, not generic posture advice. Emphasizes movement as critical and includes clear guidance on when to seek professional help.