How High Should a Monitor Be on a Desk? (Correct Height for Comfort)
If your monitor is too high or too low, it doesn’t matter how good your chair or desk is — you’ll eventually feel neck strain, eye fatigue, or shoulder tension. Monitor height is one of the most common (and easiest) ergonomic mistakes to fix.
In this guide, we explain how high a monitor should be on a desk, how to adjust it properly, and how to avoid the most common setup errors.
Short Answer
The top of your monitor should be at or slightly below eye level when you’re sitting upright.
This allows you to look slightly downward at the screen, which is the most natural and comfortable viewing angle for long work sessions.
The Ideal Monitor Height (Step by Step)
Step 1: Sit Normally
- Sit upright in your chair
- Feet flat on the floor
- Back supported
- Don’t crane your neck or slouch
Your monitor height should be adjusted to your posture, not the other way around.
Step 2: Find Your Eye Level
- Look straight ahead
- Your eye line should land:
- at the top bezel of the screen, or
- about 1–2 inches below the top
This ensures a slight downward gaze when viewing the center of the screen.
Step 3: Adjust Viewing Distance
- Sit about arm’s length away from the monitor
- Typically 20–30 inches, depending on screen size
Distance and height work together — both matter.
Why Slightly Below Eye Level Is Best
Looking slightly downward:
- Reduces neck extension
- Reduces eye surface exposure (less dryness)
- Feels more natural over long periods
A monitor that’s too high forces you to tilt your head back, which leads to strain over time.
Monitor Height by Screen Size (General Guide)
These are starting points, not rigid rules.
| Monitor Size | Typical Screen Center Height |
|---|---|
| 24″ | ~15–17 inches below eye level |
| 27″ | ~17–19 inches below eye level |
| 32″ | ~19–21 inches below eye level |
Desk height, chair height, and viewing distance will change these numbers slightly.
What If You Use a Standing Desk?
The same rules apply — your eye level changes, not the monitor rules.
When standing:
- Adjust the desk first
- Stand upright, relaxed
- Then adjust the monitor so the top is at or slightly below eye level
This is why electric standing desks + monitor arms work so well together.
👉 See best standing desks for long hours
Laptop vs External Monitor Height
Laptops are almost always too low on their own.
If you use a laptop:
- Raise it so the screen meets eye level
- Use an external keyboard and mouse
Otherwise, you’ll end up bending your neck downward for hours.
When You Should Use a Monitor Arm
Monitor arms help when:
- Your monitor stand lacks height adjustment
- You use a standing desk
- You want precise positioning
A good arm allows:
- height adjustment
- tilt
- distance control
👉 See best monitors for home offices
Common Monitor Height Mistakes
Avoid these:
- ❌ Monitor too high “to look professional”
- ❌ Monitor too low because the stand won’t adjust
- ❌ Tilting the screen back instead of lowering it
- ❌ Stacking books without stabilizing the monitor
Small misalignments add up over long hours.
Dual Monitors: Height Rules
If you use two monitors:
- Align both tops at the same height
- Place the primary monitor directly in front of you
- Angle the secondary monitor slightly inward
Uneven heights cause uneven neck movement.
👉 See ultrawide vs dual monitors
FAQs
Should my monitor be exactly at eye level?
Not exactly — slightly below eye level is usually more comfortable.
Is it bad if my monitor is too low?
Yes — it encourages neck flexion and slouching.
Does monitor height affect eye strain?
Yes. Poor height increases eye and neck fatigue.
Final Recommendation
For most people, the correct monitor height is simple: top of the screen at or slightly below eye level, viewed from about an arm’s length away. This position minimizes neck strain, reduces eye fatigue, and supports long, comfortable workdays.
If you only fix one ergonomic issue in your workspace, fix this one first.
