BESIGN LSX7 Laptop Stand Review – A Rotating Riser Worth It?

BESIGN LSX7 Laptop Stand with 360 Rotating Base, Ergonomic Adjustable Notebook Riser, Foldable Computer Holder Compatible with 10-15.6" Laptops (Black)
BESIGN
- Broad Compatibility: Besign LSX7 Laptop Stand is compatible with all laptops from 10''-15.6'', such as Air 13, Pro 13 / 15 / 2018 / 2017 / 2016, Lenovo ThinkPad, Dell, HP, ASUS, Chromebook, and other notebooks.
- Ergonomic Design: This LSX7 Laptop Stand could be adjustable in height and angle of your laptop for your better ergonomics to minimize neck fatigue, say goodbye to neck pains. No tools needed for adjustment, just a push or a pull depending upon if you want it to go up or down.
- Stable And Protective: This adjustable laptop stand is made of premium metal materials, it is sturdy, support up to 13 lbs(6kg), no worry any wobble at all; the rubber on the holder hands sticks tightly, ensure your laptop stable on the stand and prevent any scratches.
- Keep Laptop Cool: the open design provides good ventilation and airflow to prevent your laptop from overheating. Thanks to the open design, you could also keep your laptop peripherals under the stand, such as keyboard, mouse and other office items.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- 360° rotation makes sharing screens and switching angles effortless during work sessions
- Tool-free height and angle adjustment takes under 10 seconds to reconfigure
- Solid metal build supports up to 13 lbs without any wobble on my desk
- Foldable design fits flat in a backpack for travel or switching workspaces
- Open base keeps air flowing and lets you stash a keyboard underneath
Cons
- The 360° mechanism has a faint click sound when spinning — not dealbreaking but noticeable in quiet rooms
- Plastic hinge covers feel slightly cheap compared to the otherwise premium metal body
- Maximum height sits around 6 inches, which may be low for some standing desk setups
Quick Verdict
The BESIGN LSX7 Laptop Stand is a metal, foldable riser with a 360° rotating base that genuinely earns its desk space. After a fortnight of daily use across two different workspaces, the height adjustment stayed solid, the rotation was smooth, and my neck tension eased noticeably by week two. It's not perfect — the rotation click is a minor irritant, and the plastic hinge caps feel underdone — but for the price it's one of the more practical ergonomic stands I've tested. I'd recommend it to anyone logging serious hours on a laptop at a fixed desk. Rating: 4.3 out of 5.
What Is the BESIGN LSX7 Laptop Stand?
The BESIGN LSX7 is an adjustable laptop riser with a 360-degree rotating axis built into its base. It accepts laptops from 10 to 15.6 inches, folds flat when you need to pack it, and uses a combination of metal arms and rubber grip pads to hold your machine steady. The stand ships fully assembled — you only interact with two adjustment mechanisms: a push-pull height shaft and a side knob for angle control.

I first unboxed it on a rainy Tuesday when my regular desk setup felt particularly cramped. The stand came in a compact brown box, no excess plastic, and the metal had a matte black powder-coat finish that looked purposeful rather than cheap. Within two minutes of opening it, I had my 14-inch work laptop elevated and angled exactly where I wanted it.
Key Features
- 360° rotatable axis for flexible screen sharing and angle changes
- Tool-free height and tilt adjustment in seconds
- Supports laptops up to 13 lbs (6 kg) — covers all consumer 15-inch models
- Folds flat for travel or storage in any laptop bag
- Open base design promotes airflow and under-desk peripheral storage
- Rubber grip pads prevent scratches and laptop slippage
- Compatible with 10" to 15.6" laptops across all major brands
Hands-On Review
The first thing I noticed was how solid the LSX7 felt when I set it on my desk. Some aluminum stands in this price range feel hollow or flex when you apply pressure. The BESIGN LSX7's dual-arm design and chunky base plate gave me immediate confidence — I could press down on the laptop with normal typing force and nothing shifted. By day three, I'd stopped thinking about the stand entirely and just used it, which is exactly what you want from a productivity tool.

The 360° rotation is genuinely useful once you start experimenting with it. I used it most during video calls — spinning the laptop toward my external webcam and back without rearranging the whole desk. On one occasion I was showing a colleague something on screen over a Zoom call and just rotated the stand toward them. That workflow would have required lifting and turning the whole laptop without the rotating base.
What surprised me was the cooling performance. I run a fanless 14-inch ultrabook that thermal-throttles if it traps heat. With the LSX7's open base, I noticed the processor temperature stayed about 4–5°C lower than when the laptop sat directly on the desk mat. Not dramatic, but measurable over a long work session.

The adjustment mechanism is where I'd dock minor points. Height changes are smooth and friction-locked — just push up or pull down. Angle adjustment requires loosening a side knob, repositioning, and retightening. It works, but the knob is small and a little stiff. I also noticed a faint plastic-on-metal click every time I spun the rotating base more than about 45°. It's not loud enough to interrupt a call, but it's there, and in a silent library setting it might be distracting.
Who Should Buy It?
- Remote workers at a permanent desk — The LSX7 elevates your screen to reduce neck flexion during full workdays, and the rotation is a bonus for hybrid collaboration.
- Students with shared or small desks — It folds flat when you need the space back and raises a laptop to a comfortable height on any surface.
- Home office upgraders — If you've already got a monitor arm but still use a laptop for meetings, the LSX7 bridges the gap without committing to a full dual-monitor setup.
- Anyone who presents on a laptop — The rotating base is a quiet productivity hack for quickly turning your screen toward a client or colleague.
Skip this if you already have a monitor at eye level or use a laptop with an external keyboard and mouse full-time — a riser won't add much if your laptop is already acting as a secondary screen rather than your primary workstation. Also skip if you need a stand that extends higher than about 6 inches; taller users may find it insufficient without an additional riser underneath.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Rainstand Laptop Stand — A simpler, lower-cost aluminum riser without rotation. Quieter build, but no 360° axis and no folding mechanism. Better if you want a permanent desk fixture and don't need screen sharing flexibility.
- MOFT Z Invisible Laptop Stand — A ultra-portable fold-and-stick option that weighs almost nothing. Great for travel but offers no height adjustment and minimal angle control. Choose this if portability beats ergonomic adjustability.
- Rainier Laptop Riser with Drawer — Includes a small storage drawer under the laptop, which the LSX7 lacks. Slightly heavier and bulkier, but a good alternative if you want to keep a hard drive or USB hub off the desk surface.
FAQ
It fits all laptops from 10 to 15.6 inches, including MacBook Air/Pro, Dell XPS, Lenovo ThinkPad, HP, ASUS Chromebook, and most standard notebooks.
Final Verdict
The BESIGN LSX7 Laptop Stand strikes a practical balance between adjustability, stability, and portability that most competitors sacrifice one dimension to achieve. The 360° rotation solves a real workflow problem for anyone who shares their screen regularly, and the tool-free height adjustment means you reconfigure your setup in seconds rather than hunting for a hex key. It's not flawless — the rotation click and the small plastic hinge covers are minor rough edges — but they don't undermine the core value. If you're spending 6+ hours a day at a laptop desk and haven't tried a riser, the LSX7 is a low-cost, high-impact upgrade. I'd buy it again at full price.