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Practical tips from our furniture specialists — the specs that matter, common buying mistakes, and what to look for before you order.
Write down the room dimensions, mark where the desk will sit, and subtract 36" of clearance behind the chair position. Compare your available footprint to the desk's assembled dimensions — not the box dimensions — before ordering.
Commercial desks typically support 200 lbs+ on the surface. Entry-level home desks may cap at 100 lbs. If you run dual monitors, a desktop PC, and equipment, add up the weight and compare it to the desk's rated capacity before you buy.
A desk with at least two wire grommets makes cable management dramatically easier. If your preferred desk doesn't include them, plan for an aftermarket cable management tray that clamps to the back edge.
Most desks are manageable solo for experienced assemblers, but having a second person holds panels while you drive fasteners — saving time and protecting panels from sliding off and getting damaged. Schedule assembly accordingly.
Don't fully tighten any bolt or cam lock until all components are in place. Tightening too early makes it difficult to align later parts and can cause the structure to rack out of square.
Most manufacturers offer 3 to 5 finish options (espresso, mahogany, cherry, gray, white). If you're adding to an existing office, pull a finish chip or note the current furniture series before ordering to ensure a visual match.
Many buyers get double pedestal desks and find the second pedestal mostly unused. Start with a single BBF pedestal — if you genuinely need more file storage, add a lateral file cabinet nearby rather than doubling the desk footprint.
Standard interior doors are 32" to 36" wide. Large desk panels (especially 72"+ surfaces) need to be moved through the door before assembly. Check each panel's longest dimension against your door width.
A matching hutch unit mounts on the back of the desk surface and adds shelving, closed cabinets, and sometimes lighting. If you need storage but don't have floor space, a hutch is the most space-efficient upgrade.
Most desks include adjustable leveling glides on each leg. Real floors are rarely perfectly level. Take 5 minutes to set leveling feet properly at assembly — an unlevel desk feels unstable and puts uneven stress on joinery over time.