Is your home office making you ill? Experts reveal the signs
Working from home was supposed to be the dream – no long commutes, no awkward small talk. And for the most part, it is. But there’s a growing body of evidence to suggest that the average home office setup could be doing us a disservice.
Those frequent headaches and that persistent crick in your neck might not be down to stress or screen time alone it seems. From the paint on your walls to the way the afternoon sun hits your monitor, your home office could be affecting your health in ways you’d never think to connect.
Here’s what experts want you to know about getting your home office design right, so your health doesn’t take a nosedive as a consequence.
Ergonomics – what is your body trying to tell you?
If you’ve been putting nagging back pain or a persistent headache down to a stressful week, it might be time to think again. The way your body feels by Friday afternoon often has less to do with your workload and more to do with your home office setup.
Is your chair giving you a bad back?
According to experts, the single biggest mistake most home workers make is choosing the wrong office chair. More often than not, we find ourselves dragging a spare chair in from the dining room, which is perfectly fine for a Sunday roast but considerably less so for eight hours of back-to-back video calls.
Elizabeth Moreno, a qualified osteopath, doesn’t mince her words on the subject. “Chair quality is 30 – 40% of the solution,” she explains. “Your chair should support your natural lumbar curve, so built-in lumbar support is ideal. If your chair lacks this, add a lumbar pillow or roll. Sit back into the chair so the support contacts your lower back and don’t perch on the edge.”
When seated, Dr Robin Clark, Medical Director of Bupa UK, adds that your hips should sit above your knees, your back fully supported by the backrest, and your shoulders relaxed with elbows at roughly 90 degrees just above the desk.
Is your screen giving you a pain in the neck?
According to Elizabeth Moreno, neck pain accounts for 41% of work-related musculoskeletal complaints in the UK, and the culprit is often closer than people realise. “Neck stiffness, eye strain and headaches can indicate that you are too close or too far from the screen,” she explains. The fix is simpler than you’d expect: your monitor should sit roughly at arm’s length, with the top of the screen at or just below eye level, your shoulders relaxed, wrists straight and elbows bent at roughly 90 degrees.
Hand and arm discomfort is another commonly ignored warning sign of a poorly set-up desk. Elizabeth flags tingling, tension, or tenderness in the forearms or hands as a clear signal to reassess the positioning of your keyboard and mouse.
Is sitting all day bad for you?
In short, yes. Though perhaps not for the reasons you’d expect. Dr Clark warns that the effects of prolonged sedentary behaviour tend to develop gradually and silently, which is precisely what makes them so easy to dismiss. “Sitting down for too long can slow down your metabolism, making it harder for your body to regulate blood pressure, blood sugar, and break down fat,” he explains. Over time, this increases the risk of cardiovascular conditions including high blood pressure, heart disease, and stroke.
To counteract the negative effects of staying seated, Dr Clark suggests aiming to leave your chair every 30 minutes or so, even if it’s just to make a coffee or swap your desk chair for a standing position. Your body, he notes, isn’t designed to stay still. It will find ways to remind you.

Elizabeth Moreno is a dedicated and fully qualified osteopath, having graduated from the University College of Osteopathy in 2017. Throughout her Master’s degree program, Lizzie specialised in chronic pain and pain management, gaining valuable experience in various specialised clinics.

Robin is Medical Director for Bupa Global and UK Insurance, ensuring our members have access to the highest quality health services that deliver the best customer experience. Robin started his career as a GP and has since worked across a range of organisations to bring over 15 years of clinical and management experience from the public and private healthcare sectors.
Office lighting can have a bigger impact than you realise
Most of us put real thought into lighting our living rooms and bedrooms, but when it comes to our home offices, we tend to use whatever’s already there. According to the experts, that casual approach could be costing you more than you realise.
Think carefully about natural light
Too much natural light in the wrong place can be just as problematic as too little. Simon Browne, technical manager at Luxaflex, identifies glare from direct sunlight as a major – and frequently misdiagnosed – contributor to eye strain and poor concentration. “You’ll often see people subconsciously shifting position, squinting or leaning forward throughout the day without realising the cause,” he says. So, that 3pm headache you’ve been blaming on meetings might actually be a consequence of how your desk is positioned relative to the window.
Chris Gore, founder of SPOR Group, agrees, and says it’s worth thinking carefully about your home office layout before you commit to a desk position. “People set up their monitors wherever the desk fits, rather than where the light sources are – the result is either glare directly on the screen or a bright window sitting behind the display, both of which force the eye to constantly compensate, causing strain, headaches, and by mid-afternoon, a level of visual fatigue that most people just accept as normal.”
Luckily, the fix is simpler than a full room reshuffle. As a rule of thumb, sit perpendicular to any window rather than facing it or putting it directly behind you. And for rooms that get a lot of sun, external shading can block up to 98% of solar heat gain before it even enters the room, while internal blinds help diffuse harsh daylight without plunging you into darkness.
Find a balance with artificial lighting
If you’ve ever found yourself reaching for the paracetamol by 11am and blaming it on your inbox, Abbas Kanani, superintendent pharmacist at Chemist Click, has news for you. Poor home office lighting is a more common culprit than most people realise and it rarely gets the blame. “Too much glare, flickering LED lighting, or working in dim rooms with bright screens can show up as headaches by late morning, watery or dry eyes, or a feeling that concentration drops off sharply in the afternoon,” he says.
Lighting temperature plays a bigger role than most of us appreciate too. Harsh cool-white bulbs can become fatiguing over a long working day. A warmer, layered setup – ambient lighting combined with a decent task lamp – is almost always kinder on the eyes than a single overhead source.
M&S
Colby Rechargeable Lamp
This industrial-style table lamp features an adjustable head and ribbed glass shade, with exposed cable detailing adding a touch of texture. It’s available in two metallic finishes.
Dunelm
Lever Arm Table Lamp
This adjustable lever arm desk lamp offers a sleek, modern design and sits neatly on any desk. It’s a practical task lighting option that suits a range of home office styles.
Nkuku
Ulani Vintage Desk Lamp
We love this vintage-style banker’s lamp with a brass base and ribbed recycled glass shade. It’s softer and more general than a traditional desk lamp, and a stylish alternative to the standard task light.

Simon Browne is an award-winning training expert with over 27 years of experience in the window blinds industry.

Chris Gore is the founder of SPOR Group, a specialist acoustics and workplace design consultancy helping home and office workers create environments that are kinder to the brain.

Abbas Kanani is a superintendent pharmacist and independent prescriber at Chemist Click, with over a decade of experience spanning high street pharmacy, primary care, and NHS advisory roles.
Air quality and temperature
Most of us focus on how our workspace looks rather than what we’re actually breathing in, which, according to the experts, is something of an oversight. In an office sealed off from the rest of the home, indoor air quality can deteriorate faster than you think.
Are your walls off-gassing?
It might not be the first thing that comes to mind when you’re choosing a paint colour, but Jon Mee, technical advisor at Earthborn, says the contents of your tin matter as much as what’s on the colour chart. VOCs – volatile organic compounds – are carbon-based chemicals emitted as gases from paint, and can contribute to both short and long-term health issues, including irritation of the eyes, nose and throat. “Opt for a natural claypaint that is virtually VOC free,” he recommends, “meaning no horrible smells or headaches that can often be the case with some other paints.”
Is your office getting enough fresh air?
Even if your walls are pristine, a poorly ventilated room has its own problems. Abbas Kanani flags high CO₂ levels in small home offices as one of the most underestimated factors affecting how we feel at our desks. “People describe it as feeling sluggish, sleepy despite adequate sleep, or struggling to think clearly in the same room for long periods,” he says. It’s a set of symptoms that’s routinely mistaken for stress or burnout, when the real fix might be as simple as opening a window.
Is your home office overheating?
You won’t always notice a room getting warmer throughout the day, but you’ll probably notice the irritability and inexplicable mid-afternoon slump. Simon Browne warns that rooms with significant glazing are particularly vulnerable to overheating, a common and underreported problem in sun-facing home offices. The fix is often at the window: external shading tackles heat before it enters the room, while good ventilation can make a surprising difference to how clearly you think.

Jon Mee is Earthborn’s Technical Advisor. He has worked in the interiors and decorating industry for over five years and is an expert on decorating techniques and materials.
Factors that impact your mental health
The boundary between desk and sofa can blur in ways that feel harmless in the moment but corrosive over time – and the experts are clear that the mental health risks of a poorly designed home office are just as real as the physical ones.
Are you ever really switching off?
“Not giving yourself enough time away from your desk, or working longer into your evenings than you would if you were office-based, can put you at increased risk of stress, along with the health concerns that can come with it – including high blood pressure and cardiovascular disease,” says Dr Robin Clark.
The problem is that most home workers don’t recognise the pattern until it’s well established. The commute that once felt like dead time turns out to have been doing important work by creating a buffer between professional and personal life that, once removed, is harder to replace than you’d think.
Is your workspace making it worse?
Chartered psychologist Claire Law has a simple explanation for why you can’t stop thinking about your inbox at 9pm. A home office that bleeds into living space – such as a laptop left open on the kitchen table – keeps the brain in a low-level state of alertness that makes genuine rest surprisingly hard to come by. “Our brains are very good at forming associations,” she explains. “If you’re working from the same space where you eat, relax or sleep, it becomes harder for your mind to recognise when it’s time to switch off.”
In other words, if your bedroom doubles as your boardroom, don’t be surprised if sleep doesn’t come easily. So, before you get carried away turning your dining room into a home office or carving out space for an office on your landing, it’s worth asking whether the convenience is worth the cognitive bleed.

Claire Law is a BACP Senior Accredited psychotherapist based in Preston, specialising in anxiety, burnout, and the psychological impact of our everyday environments on mental health and wellbeing.
The first steps to a healthier home office
The encouraging thing about most home office health problems is that they’re eminently fixable, often without spending very much at all. Here’s where to start:
1. Move more than you think you need to
Aim to get up every 20 to 30 minutes. Not for a full workout, but just to shift position, roll your shoulders, or walk to another room. A sit-stand desk is the simplest structural fix if you can stretch to one, but even propping a laptop on a kitchen counter for 30 minutes achieves something similar. The key is balance: sit when you need support, stand when you can, and keep changing position.
2. Audit your symptoms
Abbas Kanani’s diagnostic rule of thumb is worth keeping in mind: look for complaints that are predictable, time-linked, and location-specific. Headaches that ease at weekends, back pain that disappears on holiday, afternoon fatigue that lifts the moment you leave the desk, are all patterns, not coincidences. If your symptoms improve reliably away from your workspace, your environment is almost certainly a factor.
3. Clear away any visual noise
Claire Law flags clutter and visual distraction as a significant and underappreciated drain on cognitive energy. Open shelving, unfinished projects, and sightlines into busy areas of the house all pull at attention subconsciously, even when you’re convinced you’ve tuned them out. Tidying, zoning with a room divider or curtain, or simply closing a door can reduce that load more than you’d expect.
4. Sort out your acoustics
Chris Gore identifies poor acoustics as one of the most consistently underestimated sources of daily stress. “Constantly straining to hear colleagues on calls, or being subjected to echo-heavy rooms where your own voice bounces back at you, puts the brain into a low-level stress state for hours at a time,” he says. Soft furnishings, a rug, and bookshelves all help absorb noise without requiring any additional soundproofing.
5. Add colour and greenery
The colour of your home study can actively support or undermine how you feel over the course of a working day. Jon Mee is emphatic on the subject: “The paint colours that you choose can have a dramatic effect on the mood of a room,” he says. “In a home office, colours that ground us and help us feel more comfortable, whilst also offering energising qualities, are great options. Nature-inspired tones work well – warm neutrals for a more pared-back aesthetic, or deeper, earthier colours that feel organic and refined but also offer a sense of inspiration and interest.”
Greenery works in much the same way – plants or even just an outdoor view can help restore cognitive function throughout the day. It’s one of the cheapest upgrades you can make, and one of the most effective.
If you want to embrace a brighter, healthier approach to working from home, consider a dedicated garden office or conservatory home office. These purpose-built spaces can make separation between work and life effortless.