PoteSoar Criss Cross Legged Meditation Chair Review: Comfortable Cross-Legged Office Chair

Criss Cross Legged Meditation Chair, Exquisite Home Office Furniture, Ergonomic Kneeling Chair with Lumbar Support and Adjustable Height Stool, for ADHD Adults
PoteSoar
- 【For Your Happiness】The cross legged office chair is ideal for those who like to sit in different positions.Teddy fabric is more comfortable breathable and resistant to scratches,It offers comfort and flexibility for yoga lovers,meditation practitioners,and anyone who enjoys an active sitting style.White criss cross chair is just as popular as black criss cross chair.
- 【Ergonomic Chair】The meditation chair has a sturdy metal base and five swivel casters,allowing you to freely reach where you want to go.The backrest and seat cushion are designed to fit the curve of the human spine,allowing you to change posture at any time you want.This cross legged office chair with wheels is ergonomic.
- 【For Your Health】This ergonomic cross-legged office chair offers comfortable back support for a healthy posture during work or meditation.It helps relax your body,improve circulation,and reduce leg swelling or numbness from prolonged sitting.It also alleviates stress and tension,making it ideal for ADHD or needing frequent position changes.
- 【Excellent Design】This cross legged office chair has a unique 2-layer design and can be used for cross-legged,squatting,kneeling and other kind of postures.A good kneeling chair can be adjusted to different angles of the body,suitable for home,yoga lovers and meditation lovers.This kind of criss cross chair with wheels is popular.It's also an adhd chair for adhd adults.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Unique cross-legged perch encourages frequent position changes and reduces static sitting
- Teddy fabric upholstery feels soft and holds up better than mesh for long sessions
- Five swivel casters let you roll freely without standing — a genuine usability win
- Lumbar support cushion fits the spine curve without pushing aggressively
- Adjustable height accommodates a wide range of desk and user heights
- Backrest acts as a gentle posture cue rather than a crutch you lean on heavily
Cons
- 250 lb weight limit rules out heavier users — check your requirements first
- Teddy fabric attracts pet hair and light-coloured lint visibly throughout the day
- The backrest is a posture reminder, not a true recline surface — don't expect chair-like support
Quick Verdict
The PoteSoar criss cross legged meditation chair is a genuinely different desk chair — one that puts you in an open-hip perch rather than a traditional seat. After three weeks of swapping it in and out of my WFH setup, I can say it delivers on its core promise: more movement, better posture awareness and a softer landing than a standard kneeling stool. It is not a chair you will sit in all day, and it is not trying to be. Score: 4.3 out of 5. Buy it if you want a chair that makes you fidget productively; skip it if you need a fully padded reclining seat for marathon work sessions.
What Is the PoteSoar Criss Cross Legged Meditation Chair?
The first time I noticed a chair like this I was at a co-working space, watching a yoga instructor take notes while perched cross-legged on what looked like a padded stool with a backrest bolted on. She moved constantly — rocking, shifting, uncrossing and recrossing — and her back stayed perfectly upright the entire time. That image stuck with me, and when my own lower back started barking after a full week of 9-to-5 in my normal ergonomic chair, I went looking for something similar.
The PoteSoar criss cross legged meditation chair is that idea refined for a home office. The seat is a wide, cushioned platform designed to be sat on toward the front edge, with legs resting on either side in a figure-four or full cross-legged position. A low backrest sits behind you — not for heavy leaning, but for gentle posture feedback. Five casters on a solid steel base mean you can actually roll to your printer or trash can without standing up, which sounds trivial until you realise how often a standard kneeling chair leaves you stuck in one spot.

Key Features
- Wide cushioned platform seat suitable for cross-legged, kneeling and squat-style sitting
- Low-profile backrest with lumbar curve for gentle posture support
- Solid steel base with five smooth-swivel casters
- Pneumatic height adjustment spanning approximately 7 inches
- Soft teddy fabric upholstery — breathable, scratch-resistant and warmer than mesh
- Supports up to 250 lbs; seat height range roughly 21–28 inches
- 1-year manufacturer warranty
Hands-On Review
Setting it up took me about fifteen minutes. The box includes the base, gas cylinder, seat-and-backrest unit, five casters and a small hex wrench. Nothing was missing, nothing was overtightened out of the box — a pet peeve of mine with budget furniture. The casters clicked into the base with satisfying snaps, and the gas cylinder seated cleanly into the central post. No stripped threads, no wobble once the seat was locked down.

The teddy fabric is genuinely soft — more comfortable than the mesh panels on the kneeling chair I tested last year. It does attract pet hair though; if you have a cat or dog you will notice it within the first hour. A lint roller lives on my desk now. The warmth of the fabric also means it is more comfortable in a cool room than a hot one — something worth noting if your home office runs warm in summer.
By day three I had settled into a rhythm: two hours in my regular chair, then swap to the PoteSoar for an hour or so. The open-hip perch forces your spine into a different alignment than a standard seat, and I noticed my lower back felt less compressed by the end of the afternoon. The backrest does not let you lean way back — it is more of a posture nudge — but that is by design. You are meant to sit actively on this chair, not sink into it.

What surprised me was the casters. I genuinely did not expect to care about them this much. Being able to roll over to my filing cabinet or reach for a notebook without standing up changes the dynamic of the chair entirely. A standard kneeling stool leaves you planted; this one keeps you mobile. That said, the 250 lb weight ceiling is a real constraint. If you are over that limit the chair will still hold you, but the gas cylinder and casters may degrade faster — something to factor in before buying.
Who Should Buy It?
- Remote workers with back pain who want to introduce more movement into a sedentary day without buying a full standing desk setup
- ADHD adults who find standard chairs numbing and need something that rewards frequent position shifts
- Yoga and meditation practitioners who already sit cross-legged regularly and want ergonomic support during desk work
- Students and creative professionals who switch tasks often and value a chair that moves with them
Skip this chair if you are looking for a primary all-day seating solution — the cross-legged position puts sustained pressure on the shins and knees that most people cannot tolerate for more than four or five hours. It also is not built for users who need to lean back heavily during calls or video conferences; the backrest simply is not tall enough for that.
Alternatives Worth Considering
Varier Meditation Chair — a Scandinavian original with a higher price tag but a more refined tilting mechanism and a stronger frame. Worth it if you want a chair that doubles as a true meditation seat with a polished aesthetic.
DRÖNA Kneeling Chair by IKEA — a budget-friendly kneeling stool with no backrest or casters. Cheaper and lighter, but lacks the lumbar support and mobility that make the PoteSoar more desk-ready.
SIHUAJIO Kneeling Chair with Backrest — a comparable alternative with similar specs and a slightly different fabric choice. Worth comparing if you want to check current pricing across brands before committing.
FAQ
The chair supports up to approximately 250 lbs (113 kg). If you are close to or above that limit, the stability and caster performance may be affected over time.
Final Verdict
Three weeks in, the PoteSoar criss cross legged meditation chair earns its space in my office. It is not a replacement for my main ergonomic chair, but as a deliberate posture reset tool it works exactly as intended. The teddy fabric is cozy, the casters are genuinely useful and the lumbar support is firm enough to help without fighting you. My shins felt the adjustment period for about a week; after that the discomfort faded as I settled into shorter, more intentional sessions.
If you are looking for an active sitting chair that rewards movement rather than punishing stillness, this is a solid pick at its price point. The weight limit and shin pressure are honest trade-offs worth knowing before you buy rather than after. At around the $100 mark it undercuts most named competitors while matching or exceeding their core feature set.