The single most common ergonomic mistake in home offices isn’t the chair — it’s the monitor. Most people have their screen too low, which forces the neck to bend forward for hours at a time. Over weeks and months, this causes real pain. Here’s exactly how to fix it in under 5 minutes, for free.
In This Guide
The Rule: Top of Screen at Eye Level
When you sit up straight and look straight ahead, your eyes should land on the top third of your monitor — not the middle, not the bottom. The top edge of the screen should be at or just below eye level. If you’re looking down at your screen right now, your monitor is too low.
Step-by-Step Setup
Sit properly first
Before adjusting your monitor, get your chair right. Feet flat on the floor, knees at 90°, back supported by the chair. Your eye level is your reference point — and it changes if your chair is wrong.
Find your eye height
Sit in your normal working position and look straight ahead. That’s your eye level. Have someone mark the wall at that height, or use a tape measure from the floor to get a number.
Adjust your monitor
The top edge of your monitor should sit at — or just slightly below — your eye level. If your monitor stand adjusts in height, use it now. If it doesn’t, see the section below.
Check your distance
Your screen should be 50–70cm from your eyes — roughly arm’s length. Too close causes eye strain. Too far causes squinting and forward leaning, which defeats the purpose.
Tilt the screen back slightly
A 10–20° backward tilt reduces glare and keeps the screen more perpendicular to your line of sight. Most monitor stands allow this — it’s a small adjustment that helps more than it seems.
What to Buy If Your Stand Isn’t Adjustable
Option 1: Monitor Riser (~$25)
Simple, stable, cheap. Raises your monitor to the right height and often has shelf space underneath for a keyboard. Great if you don’t need to adjust height regularly.
~$25 · No tools required
Option 2: Monitor Arm (~$45)
More expensive, but gives you full flexibility — height, depth, tilt, all adjustable on the fly. Worth it if you use a standing desk and need to reposition regularly, or if you have two monitors.
~$45 · Gas spring, one-handed adjustment
Laptop Users: Special Case
Fix option 1: Raise the laptop on a stand → use an external keyboard and mouse
Fix option 2: Use an external monitor at the correct height → use the laptop as a second screen
~$25 · Raises screen, frees desk space
~$40 · Use with raised laptop
Signs Your Monitor Is at the Wrong Height
Check these — if any apply, fix your monitor first
- Neck pain or stiffness at the end of the workday
- Headaches that start at the back of the head or behind the eyes
- You find yourself leaning forward in your chair by afternoon
- Your chin points down while you work
- Your upper back is tight after a full day
Monitor height is the cheapest and fastest ergonomic fix you can make — and it costs nothing if you already have an adjustable stand. Do this before you buy anything else.
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