DeskShow Standing Desk Review: Solid Electric Adjustable Desk?

DeskShow Electric Standing Desk Adjustable - 60x28 Inch Sit Stand Desk with 1 Inch Thick Tabletop, Double Beam Frame, 3 Memory Height Adjustment, Cable Management for Home Office
DeskShow
- Rock-solid Stability : DeskShow standing desk is engineered with a heavy-duty 2.5mm steel base and a reinforced double-beam design, delivering unwavering support for all your office essentials. The upgraded frame offers a robust lifting capacity of up to 220 lbs(100 kg).
- 1" Thickened Spacious Top: This 1" thick desktop adds stability to your standing desk setup, providing heavy-duty support for monitors and equipment, while the 60" x 28” spacious surface offers ample room for accessories, supplies, and decor.
- Reliable&Durable: The powerful lifting mechanism can easily handle the weight of office and gaming equipment (maximum load 220 lbs), and has been tested for 50,000 lift cycles to ensure exceptional durability and long-term stable performance.
- Electric Height Adjustable&Memory Height: Our electric standing desk offers smooth height adjustments from 27.95" to 45.67", It features 3 programmable memory buttons, allowing you to save and effortlessly switch between your favorite sitting and standing heights. Perfect for multiple users or varying scenarios, this desk adapts to your needs for a seamless ergonomic experience.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Rock-solid stability with 2.5mm steel base and double-beam frame supporting up to 220 lbs
- Smooth and quiet motor operation under 45dB — won't disturb others in the room
- 3 programmable memory buttons let you switch between sitting and standing heights instantly
- 1-inch thick desktop feels sturdy and provides ample 60x28 inch workspace
- 30-minute assembly with pre-drilled holes and clearly labeled hardware
Cons
- Control panel display shows metric units only — inconvenient if you prefer imperial
- Minimum height of 27.95 inches sits higher than some competitors, which may not work with all chairs
- No anti-collision feature, so you need to watch for obstacles when lowering
Quick Verdict
If you are in the market for an electric standing desk that prioritises stability over flashy extras, the DeskShow standing desk earns a solid recommendation. Its double-beam steel frame holds up to 220 lbs without a wobble, the motor is genuinely quiet, and three memory presets make switching between sitting and standing effortless. After three weeks of daily use, I found only two meaningful drawbacks: the metric-only display and the absence of anti-collision sensors. At its price point, though, this desk punches above its weight class. Score: 4.3 / 5.
What Is the DeskShow Electric Standing Desk?
The DeskShow is a 60-by-28-inch electric height-adjustable desk built for home offices and gaming setups. Unlike cheaper alternatives that use a single support beam, this model features a reinforced double-beam design with a 2.5mm steel base — a construction choice that significantly reduces the lateral sway you often feel on budget standing desks when you lean on the edge. The 1-inch thick desktop is solid-core composite, not the hollow-core panels you find on entry-level desks, which adds to the overall rigidity.

Out of the box, the DeskShow arrives in two heavy boxes: one for the tabletop and one for the frame. The motor assembly is pre-installed on one side, and all wiring is colour-coded and plug-and-play. You connect the two leg columns to the tabletop using the included bolts, attach the control box, and you are essentially done. The whole process took me 38 minutes — a bit longer than the advertised 30, but I was reading the manual instead of just guessing.
Key Features
- Double-beam steel frame with 2.5mm base thickness for rock-solid stability
- Supports up to 220 lbs (100 kg) of equipment and accessories
- Height range: 27.95" to 45.67" — suitable for users 5'0" to 6'4"
- 3 programmable memory buttons for quick height switching
- Motor operates at under 45dB — whisper-quiet for shared spaces
- 60" x 28" desktop with integrated cable management tray
- 50,000-cycle lift mechanism tested for long-term durability
Hands-On Review
I set the DeskShow up in my spare bedroom, which doubles as a WFH space. Right away, I noticed how solid the desktop feels under my palms — no flex, no creak when I lean forward to type. I loaded it with a 34-inch curved monitor, a 15-inch laptop, two external drives, and a small desk lamp, and the frame did not so much as shudder during a full-height transition. That is more weight than most people would pile on, but it is a useful stress test.

The motors are the real surprise here. I have tried standing desks where the height adjustment sounds like a pneumatic drill, but the DeskShow glides with a low hum that barely registers. On a video call, my colleagues did not hear it in the background. That matters more than you think if you take calls from home. The three memory presets were intuitive to program — I saved my sitting height, my standing height with a monitor riser, and a mid-tall setting I use when reading documents. Switching between them takes about four seconds from button press to locked position.

One thing nobody mentions in the listings: the control panel display is metric-only. I had to do a quick mental conversion the first dozen times I checked my standing height. Not a dealbreaker, but mildly annoying on a desk sold primarily in the US market. The second thing I noticed after week two is that the desk does not have anti-collision sensors. If you lower it with a low-profile item — say, a shoebox — underneath, it will push it rather than stop. I learned this the hard way with a stack of papers. Watch the descent if you have anything under the frame.
Who Should Buy It?
The DeskShow is a strong match for:
- Remote workers putting in 8+ hour days who want a reliable sit-stand cycle without worrying about desk stability
- Home office upgraders moving from a basic desk and wanting their first real ergonomic investment
- Multi-person households where the 3 memory presets let each person store their preferred heights
- Gamers with heavy setups who need the 220-lb capacity for multiple monitors, streaming gear, and a PC tower
Skip this desk if your workspace is tight — the 60-inch width needs at least 65 inches of clearance to open the chair fully. And if you need anti-collision protection for a household with pets or young children, look at FlexiSpot's E7 series, which includes this feature as standard.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- FlexiSpot E7 — costs about $150 more but includes anti-collision sensors and a stronger motor system rated for heavier loads. Worth the upgrade if you are upgrading from a premium desk category.
- Jarvis Bamboo Standing Desk — has a more refined bamboo desktop option and a 7-year frame warranty. The motor system is comparable, but the Jarvis is significantly more expensive.
- SHW Electric Height Adjustable Desk — a budget alternative at roughly half the price. The motor is noisier and the weight capacity is lower, but it covers basic sit-stand needs if budget is the primary constraint.
FAQ
The DeskShow standing desk supports up to 220 lbs (100 kg). The lifting mechanism has been tested for 50,000 cycles, which is standard for the price range.
Final Verdict
The DeskShow electric standing desk is not trying to compete with $800-plus premium models, and that is precisely where it wins. For the price, you get a genuinely stable frame, a motor that does not embarrass you on video calls, and a desktop large enough for serious workstation configurations. The metric display and missing anti-collision are the only two things I would change, and neither is a dealbreaker for most buyers. If you want a no-fuss DeskShow standing desk that just works day after day, this is the one to buy.