Seat height
Adjust seat height so your feet rest flat on the floor with knees at approximately 90 degrees.
Posture awareness, seated movement patterns, and ergonomic chair setup — practical reference for people who spend most of their workday seated.
A correctly adjusted chair reduces static muscle load and supports natural spinal alignment throughout long seated periods.
Adjust seat height so your feet rest flat on the floor with knees at approximately 90 degrees.
The backrest should support the natural inward curve of the lower spine without forcing an exaggerated arch.
Armrests support upper arm weight and reduce shoulder elevation during computer use.
Seat depth affects thigh circulation and back contact — a common but often overlooked adjustment.
Small, repeatable actions that gradually shift how you sit and move throughout the workday.
Enter your work schedule details to generate an example daily movement plan aligned with your working hours.
Exercises you can perform without leaving your chair — suitable for open-plan offices or focused work periods.
Sit tall, place one hand on the opposite knee. Gently rotate your torso. Hold 20 seconds each side. Keep hips and feet facing forward.
Lift one foot slightly off the floor. Rotate the ankle in wide circles — 10 each direction. Switch legs. Supports lower leg circulation during prolonged sitting.
Sit upright. Slowly lift one knee toward your chest, hold for 3 seconds, lower. Alternate legs for 10 repetitions each. Engages core and hip flexors.