Working from home

Walk through your workday at home.

The home desk traps you in a chair from the first call to the last. The Office Walker turns calls and deep work into gentle movement, quiet enough that your mic never hears it, and handsome enough to leave out in the living room.

The Office Walker under a standing desk in a home living room

Run the numbers

Steps you'd add to a work-from-home day.

Enter the hours you could realistically walk, calls, reading, admin, at a gentle pace. Honest estimate; assumptions shown below.

added steps / day
added steps / week
calories / week
calories / month

Assumes a slow ~2 km/h (or easy ~3 km/h) pace, ~1,320 steps per km, and METs of 2.0 / 2.8 against your body weight, across a 5-day week (a month ≈ 4.3 weeks). Rough estimate, walk only as much as feels good.

The real problem

Your home isn't a gym, and your day is back-to-back.

Remote work removed the commute, the walk to the meeting room, the trip to lunch. What's left is a chair, a camera, and hours of calls with no natural reason to move.

A plastic gym pad shoved in the corner doesn't fix that, it hums on your mic, clashes with the room, and gets put away. You need movement that fits a real home and a real meeting schedule.

Through the day

Movement that fits remote work.

  • 01

    Back-to-back calls

    Walk through stand-ups and one-to-ones. With no motor, there's no hum for your mic to pick up, and you stop mid-step the moment you need to speak.

  • 02

    Camera-on meetings

    It reads as furniture, not gym gear, in the background. Quiet, composed, and you're simply standing and moving while you talk.

  • 03

    The shared living space

    Wood and steel that belongs in a living room, ships flat, and takes up little floor. No eyesore to hide when the workday ends.

How it fits

Quiet enough for the call. Handsome enough to keep out.

Because the Office Walker is fully manual, it sits under 45 dB, your steps on the deck, nothing more. Mics don't catch it, calls don't suffer, and you can pause instantly to make a point.

It's 110 x 54 x 21 cm and only adds about 14 cm of height, so it tucks under most standing desks. And it's built like furniture, wood, steel, repairable, so it earns its place in the room you also live in.

See the full product
The Office Walker tucked under a standing desk at home

Questions

Remote-work questions, answered.

Will my mic pick it up on calls?

No. There's no motor, so the only sound is your footsteps on the deck, around 30 to 45 dB. Owners walk through video calls without anyone noticing.

Can I pause quickly to speak or focus?

Instantly. The belt only moves as you do, so you stop mid-step to make a point, then carry on, no motor running on without you.

Will it fit under my standing desk?

It's 110 x 54 x 21 cm and adds about 14 cm of walking height, which fits under most standing desks at a comfortable setting. Check your desk's minimum height to be sure.

Does it look okay in a living room?

That's the point of building it from wood and steel. It reads as a considered piece of furniture, not gym kit, many owners leave it out permanently.

Is it distracting on video?

You're simply standing and moving gently while you talk. There's quiet and no fixed pace pulling at you, so it stays in the background of the call.

How is it different from a motorised walking pad?

It's manual, you power it, so there's no hum on the mic, no fixed pace, and nothing electronic to fail. See the full comparison with motorised pads.

One pad

Walk through your workday at home.

Built to order in wood and steel. Shipped flat across the EU within 2 to 3 weeks.

5-year parts warranty. 30-day returns. Free EU shipping.