# Study Table Sizes and Ergonomic Heights Explained

**By Megafurniture Admin** · 2026-05-28

![](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/compact-study-table-office-chair-hdb-workspace.jpg?v=1779961777)

Most first-home buyers spend considerable time choosing a sofa or a bed, then pick a study table almost as an afterthought. That order of priority tends to reverse itself after the first month of working from home. The desk is where you spend six to eight hours on weekdays; its width, depth, and height shape your posture, your comfort, and the quality of the work you do there. Getting these numbers right from the start costs nothing extra. Getting them wrong costs you a new desk within a year.

Quick Answer: For most adults, a study table should be between 120 cm and 160 cm wide, 60 cm to 75 cm deep, and set at a height of 72 cm to 76 cm. Taller users above 180 cm benefit from a surface closer to 76 cm; shorter users below 160 cm from one closer to 70 cm. The depth matters as much as the width: below 55 cm, a monitor cannot sit at a proper viewing distance.

## Why the Numbers Matter More Than the Look

A study table is a working surface before it is a piece of furniture. The proportions you choose determine whether your wrists stay neutral on the keyboard, whether your monitor sits at the correct distance from your eyes, and whether your lower back receives adequate support from the chair behind it. These are not abstract ergonomic ideals; they are the difference between finishing a workday without tension in the neck and shoulders or finishing it with both.

That said, proportion also serves the room. A table too large for a three-room HDB study reads as crowded and blocks circulation. A table too narrow for the work it holds reads as provisional. The considered choice serves both the body and the room simultaneously, which is the principle that guides every size recommendation that follows.

If you are building out a study space for the first time, it helps to browse a [study table collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/study-tables) with the measurements already noted before you visit a showroom. Knowing your room dimensions and your eye-level height in advance halves the decision time.

## Standard Study Table Dimensions: A Reference Table

The figures below represent the range that covers the majority of adult users and Singapore home layouts. They are starting points, not fixed rules; household needs, room dimensions, and the nature of the work all affect the right choice.

   

**Dimension**

**Compact smaller rooms**

**Standard**

**Generous dedicated study**

Width

100 cm – 120 cm

120 cm – 150 cm

150 cm – 180 cm

Depth

50 cm – 55 cm

60 cm – 70 cm

70 cm – 80 cm

Height fixed

72 cm – 74 cm

74 cm – 76 cm

74 cm – 76 cm

Clearance under table

Min. 65 cm

Min. 68 cm

Min. 68 cm

The clearance figure is one most buyers overlook entirely. It refers to the space between the floor and the underside of the tabletop, which must accommodate your thighs with room to move. Below 65 cm, taller users find the posture constrained. Below 60 cm, it becomes genuinely uncomfortable over a full working day.

## Ergonomic Height: The Detail Most Retailers Do Not Volunteer

Here is the part that tends to go unsaid: a fixed-height desk at 75 cm suits someone roughly 170 cm to 175 cm tall, seated in an adjustable chair set to the correct position. Below 160 cm, that same desk height pushes the shoulders up and forward. Above 180 cm, it forces the elbows below the wrist, which loads the forearm tendons over time.

The correct ergonomic setup works from the elbow down. Seated with your feet flat on the floor and your knees at roughly 90 degrees, your elbows should rest at the desk surface without the shoulders rising. That elbow height varies from around 63 cm for a person 155 cm tall to around 78 cm for a person 185 cm tall. Most fixed desks are set to 74 cm or 75 cm, which works well for the middle of that range and less well for the ends.

If your height sits outside the 165 cm to 180 cm range, an adjustable-height desk resolves the problem completely, at the cost of a somewhat higher price point. A quality adjustable frame that holds its position reliably over years of daily use is worth the investment where the ergonomic case is clear. For everyone else, a well-chosen fixed desk paired with a height-adjustable [office chair](https://esteller.sg/collections/office-chairs) covers the requirement at lower cost.

## Depth and the Monitor Distance Rule

![Wooden study table with drawers, ergonomic office chair, and built-in shelving in a refined Singapore home office.](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/wooden-study-table-with-storage-home-office-singapore.jpg?v=1779961837)

Desk depth is underweighted in most buying decisions. The standard recommendation for monitor viewing distance is 50 cm to 70 cm from the eyes, with the top of the screen at or just below eye level. On a desk only 50 cm deep, a monitor placed at the back edge sits at roughly 40 cm from a seated user's eyes. That is too close for sustained work and contributes to eye strain over time.

A depth of 60 cm is the practical minimum for a desktop monitor setup. It allows the monitor to sit at the rear of the surface with the keyboard and mouse in front, and still leaves the necessary viewing distance. At 70 cm, there is room for a second screen, a notebook, and a coffee cup alongside without crowding. The essenziale principle here: do not trade depth for room space unless the room genuinely requires it.

For laptop-only users, 55 cm is workable, though the screen will be closer than recommended for extended sessions. A laptop stand that raises the screen and a separate keyboard and mouse restore the correct geometry on a shallower surface.

## Choosing the Right Width for the Work

Width is the dimension most buyers focus on, and it is the one with the most honest trade-offs. A 100 cm desk holds a laptop and a notebook. It cannot hold a desktop monitor, a second screen, studio equipment, or any of the other surfaces that professional or creative work tends to accumulate.

For a single-monitor setup with a dedicated keyboard and room for documents, 120 cm is the practical minimum and works in most three-room HDB studies. At 140 cm to 150 cm, a dual-monitor setup fits comfortably. At 160 cm and above, the desk begins to serve as a proper workstation, with room for peripherals, a task light, and a clear section kept free for writing or reading.

If the study is a converted bedroom or a dedicated room, a wider desk earns its place. If the study corner is carved from a living room or a bedroom, a compact or extendable format may serve better. Esteller's [extendable study table collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/extendable-study-table) is a considered choice for rooms where the desk needs to do more when work demands it and less when it does not, and the [small study table range](https://esteller.sg/collections/small-study-table) covers the compact end of the spectrum without sacrificing surface quality.

## Storage, Frame Material, and Surface Finish

![Singaporean homeowner adjusting a desk lamp at a wooden study table with ergonomic office chair in a calm home workspace.](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/study-table-height-ergonomic-chair-singapore-workspace.jpg?v=1779961859)

Friday afternoon, the laptop closed, the desk cleared, the room reverting to a reading corner. The desk that allows this dual life is one where storage is considered: side drawers for cables and stationery, a shelf for reference books, or an overhead hutch if the ceiling height and room proportions allow. A surface kept visually clear is easier to leave behind at the end of the day, which is the quiet practical argument for integrated storage.

Frame material determines how the desk holds up over years of daily loading. A solid hardwood or steel frame carries the weight of monitors, books, and equipment without flex. Particleboard-core frames with laminate surfaces are common at the lower price points and serviceable for light use; under sustained loading or in humid conditions, the core can swell at the joints over time. Esteller's [wooden study table range](https://esteller.sg/collections/wooden-study-table) and [storage study table collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/storage-study-table) cover both the material and the organisation question in a single choice.

Surface finish affects both the daily hand and the room's character. A matte or textured laminate reduces glare from overhead lighting, which matters when the desk faces a window. A timber veneer or solid wood surface holds its character over years of use in a way that a printed foil finish does not. We've seen this repeatedly with first-home buyers: the desk chosen for looks at a low price point is often the first piece replaced, not the sofa.

## The Chair and the Desk Must Be Considered Together

A study table chosen in isolation is half a decision. The chair behind it determines whether the ergonomic geometry the desk was chosen to support actually works in practice. Seat height, lumbar support, and armrest position all interact with desk height. An [executive office chair](https://esteller.sg/collections/executive-office-chair) with a height range of 45 cm to 55 cm covers most adult users and pairs correctly with a standard 74 cm to 76 cm desk surface.

The pairing also matters visually. A desk with considered proportions and a chair that sits too low reads as mismatched in the room. A chair set to the correct height for the user and the desk resolves the study space into a composed whole, which is the form-and-function principle in its most practical form.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### What is the standard study table height in Singapore?

Most study tables sold in Singapore are set between 72 cm and 76 cm, with 74 cm to 75 cm being the most common fixed height. This suits users in the 165 cm to 180 cm range when paired with an adjustable chair. Taller or shorter users benefit from an adjustable-height desk or a chair with a wider height range to compensate.

### What study table size is right for a three-room HDB?

A desk between 100 cm and 120 cm wide and 55 cm to 60 cm deep fits most three-room HDB study corners without blocking circulation. If the desk occupies a dedicated study room rather than a shared space, 120 cm to 140 cm wide is the more comfortable working width. Always measure the wall length and factor in at least 90 cm of clear floor space behind the chair for movement.

### Is 60 cm deep enough for a study desk?

Yes, for most setups. At 60 cm depth, a single monitor can sit at the rear with the keyboard in front, maintaining approximately 50 cm of viewing distance. For dual-monitor or large ultrawide screen setups, 65 cm to 70 cm is more comfortable. For laptop-only work, 55 cm is workable with a stand to raise the screen.

### Do I need an adjustable-height desk?

Not necessarily. An adjustable-height desk solves the ergonomic problem most directly, but a quality fixed desk paired with a height-adjustable chair covers the same ground at a lower cost for the majority of users. The case for an adjustable desk is strongest if you share the desk with someone of significantly different height, or if you want the option to work standing for part of the day.

### What should I look for in a study table frame?

Frame rigidity is the primary consideration. A solid hardwood frame or a steel-reinforced frame holds its geometry under sustained loading without flex or joint movement. Ask about the tabletop core as well: a medium-density fibreboard core with a quality laminate or veneer surface holds up better in Singapore's humidity than low-density particleboard. Drawer runners and cable management are secondary details, but ones that affect daily use more than buyers tend to anticipate.

## The Right Desk Holds Its Place for Years

A study table chosen with the correct dimensions earns its place quietly: the posture stays comfortable, the monitor sits at the right distance, the room remains proportional. These are not qualities you notice daily once they are right. You notice them when they are wrong, usually after several months of neck strain or a room that never quite settles.

Esteller's affordable luxury range, from approximately SGD 600 to SGD 2,500, is built to the same considered standard across desks, chairs, and study furniture: transparent material specifications, solid frame construction, and a three-year warranty that reflects confidence in how the pieces are made. The 4.8 rating across 96 Google reviews is not a marketing figure; it is what thoughtful construction looks like after years of actual use.

The [study and computer table collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/study-table-computer-table) lists current configurations, dimensions, and material specifications in full, a considered place to begin a shortlist. New pieces join the collection through the year, so it is always worth a fresh look.

When the measurements are settled and the questions narrowed, the showroom is the cleanest next step. The design team at 604 Sembawang Road, #01-18 Sembawang Shopping Centre, is available daily from 10am to 10pm to walk through configurations, surface materials, and how a desk and chair will sit together in your room. Reach the team ahead at +65 6348 3144 or [hello@esteller.sg](mailto:hello@esteller.sg)  if you prefer.

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> Source: [Esteller Furniture](https://esteller.sg/blogs/articles/study-table-sizes-ergonomic-heights-explained)
