Buying guide
We spent 12 weeks testing 15 office chairs, rotating them weekly as primary work chairs for writers, software engineers, and a physiotherapist on our advisory panel. Here is what we learned.
What Actually Matters
Lumbar support adjustability is the most important feature — not the presence of lumbar support, but whether it can be positioned correctly for your spine. Height adjustability range matters more than most buyers expect: if you are taller than 6’2″ or shorter than 5’4″, many chairs will not suit you regardless of price.
Best Overall: Herman Miller Aeron (Size B)
The Aeron’s 8Z Pellicle mesh distributes weight across a larger surface area than any chair we tested. The PostureFit SL lumbar system supports both the sacrum and lumbar spine, which most competitors do not. Expensive, but we saw no degradation in comfort across 12 weeks of daily use.
Best Value: Flexispot BS13 Pro
At under $300, the BS13 Pro offers genuine adjustability — armrest height, depth, angle, seat depth, lumbar height — that chairs at twice the price often omit. The mesh breathes well and the seat foam retained its shape across our test period.


