JANE EYRE Computer Tower Stand Review: Adjustable CPU Holder with Charging Station

JANE EYRE Computer Tower Stand - Adjustable PC Tower Stand CPU Holder Cart with Charging Station for Office Home Classroom,23.03"-28.3" H, black
JANE EYRE
- PC Tower Stands with Charge Station: Introducing our PC tower holder for IT professionals with integrated power solutions – The integrated dual 120V/12A sockets and dual USB ports provide a clean and efficient way to power your laptop, smartphone, printer, tablet, or any electronic device. Maintain an orderly workspace while keeping all your gadgets conveniently charged and ready to use. Plus, the computer tower rack doubles as a side table,offering an additional power source for your desk lamp.
- Adjustable Height Wood Computer Tower Stand: Discover the perfect fit for your office with our 2-tier computer CPU stand for a business environment which offers ten distinct height adjustments. Imagine placing your small office tower, printer, or mobile devices like smartphones and tablets at just the right height, providing a comfortable and ergonomic workspace. Additionally, the stand's adjustable dimensions allow it to seamlessly align with your desk, ensuring a clean and professional look.
- Expanded Dimensions Mobile CPU Stand: Upgrade your setup with our CPU holder for business owners which boasts an expanded bottom dimension, featuring a bottom dimension that's 19.2*11.5 wide, offering more space. Whether you're a gamer looking to house your console or a professional who needs space for multiple devices, our stand ensures a snug fit, offering a spacious and accommodating platform.
- PC Stand with Wheels: PC holder for gamers designed with 4 robust hooks, it's a convenient storage solution for your gaming headset, keeping it within easy reach. The PC rack features two wheels with built-in brakes for smooth movement and secure positioning, ensuring your computer tower holder stays put when you need it to. This computer tower rack is the perfect blend of utility and style for the modern gamer.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Built-in dual outlets and USB ports eliminate a power strip from the equation
- Ten height settings accommodate most desk-to-floor gaps without guesswork
- Two braked wheels make it easy to reposition without lifting the entire rig
- Four hooks on the side give headsets and cables a dedicated home off the floor
- Expanded base dimensions keep heavier full-tower builds stable and wobble-free
Cons
- Assembly requires a Phillips-head screwdriver — not included, which is a minor oversight
- The top tier is better suited to smaller form factors; large heavy towers can feel precarious at higher height settings
- No cable management clips built in, so cords from the charging station can look messy without a DIY solution
Quick Verdict
The JANE EYRE computer tower stand earns its place in a home office or gaming setup by combining height adjustability with a built-in charging station. It is not flawless — assembly takes about 30 minutes and heavier towers require care at higher settings — but for the price, the combination of outlets, USB ports, rolling wheels, and a 2-tier design is genuinely hard to beat. Score: 4.2 out of 5.
What Is the JANE EYRE Computer Tower Stand?
I first unboxed this on a rainy Tuesday when my desk was already buried under two monitors and a tangle of cables. The JANE EYRE computer tower stand arrived flat-packed in a surprisingly heavy box — the kind that tells you the frame is steel, not cheap plastic. The concept is straightforward: a rolling, height-adjustable CPU holder that doubles as a side-table charging station.

Out of the box, the stand is all matte-black steel with wood-tone shelves. The build quality feels solid at first grab — the kind of weight that suggests it will hold up to daily abuse rather than becoming furniture for a spare room within a year. The integrated charging station on the lower shelf is the standout feature: two standard US outlets and two USB ports sit flush in the frame, meaning you do not need a separate power strip tucked under your desk anymore.
Key Features
- Integrated charging station: dual 120V/12A outlets plus dual USB ports on the lower shelf
- Adjustable height from 23.03 to 28.3 inches across ten positions
- 2-tier design: top tier for the PC tower, lower shelf doubles as a side table or device charging area
- Expanded bottom footprint: 19.2 by 11.5 inches for stability with full-tower builds
- Four robust side hooks for headset or cable storage
- Two rolling wheels with built-in brakes for mobility and secure positioning
Hands-On Review
Setting it up took me back to the IKEA days — except the instructions were actually readable. All bolts, washers, and the small hex wrench were in labelled bags. The only snag: the listing says a Phillips-head screwdriver is required, and mine was upstairs. Thirty minutes later, standing height at position six, the tower was secure and the lower shelf was already doing double duty holding a desk lamp and a phone charger.

What surprised me was how often I reached for the charging station. My laptop brick, a tablet, and a phone all plug in there now. That is three fewer adapters hogging the power strip behind my monitor. The USB ports are nothing special — 5V/1A territory — but they are handy for topping off headphones or a smartwatch overnight.

After a week, I moved the stand to the gaming room to test it under a full-tower AMD build. At height setting six, everything was stable. By setting nine, I started to notice a faint wobble when the chair rolled into the stand. The product guide actually mentions this: heavier towers perform better at settings one through four. Fair enough — read the manual first.
Will I keep using it? Yes, but with one caveat: cable management is left entirely to you. The charging station outputs are great, but cords from the tower itself drape over the edges of the top tier. A few velcro ties solve that in five minutes, but I wish JANE EYRE had included even basic clips.
Who Should Buy It?
This stand makes the most sense for:
- Remote workers with limited desk space who want a tower off the floor without a permanent footprint
- Gamers who need airflow under their rig and a place to park a headset between sessions
- IT professionals who plug and unplug multiple devices daily and appreciate having power outlets within arm's reach
- Anyone who rearranges their workspace frequently — the rolling design actually rolls smoothly on hardwood and low-pile carpet
Skip this if you have a very heavy workstation tower (think dual-GPU liquid-cooled builds over 40 pounds) and plan to keep it at the highest settings — the stability trade-off at maximum height is real. Also skip it if you need integrated cable management out of the box, because that is simply not what this product offers.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the charging station feature does not appeal to you, the Amazon Basics Rolling Computer Stand offers a simpler two-shelf design at a similar price point, though without USB ports or integrated outlets. For buyers prioritising a more industrial look, the Victor Mobile CPU Stand is a long-standing favourite with a heavier frame — but it lacks any charging capability whatsoever. Gamers who want a dedicated headphone hook and a slightly lower profile may prefer the Atlantic Gaming Computer Stand, which is designed specifically with consoles and gaming peripherals in mind.
FAQ
The stand adjusts between 23.03 inches and 28.3 inches, offering ten distinct height positions to match different desk heights and user preferences.
Final Verdict
The JANE EYRE computer tower stand is a practical, well-priced piece of kit that solves a real problem: keeping your tower accessible, ventilated, and powered without adding clutter. The built-in charging station is the feature I did not know I needed until I had it. Assembly is manageable, the wheels work, and the height range covers most home office and gaming desk configurations. It is not a premium product, and heavy towers at maximum height will have you reaching for the brake locks more often than you would like — but for the majority of buyers, those are minor complaints rather than deal-breakers.