Review

FlexiSpot E7 Plus 4-Leg Standing Desk

A four-leg version of FlexiSpot's popular E7 frame, built to kill wobble on wide tops and at full standing height.

4.6
out of 5 Excellent
Price $749.00

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FlexiSpot E7 Plus 4-Leg Standing Desk

What we like

  • Four legs dramatically reduce side-to-side sway at max height
  • 440 lb capacity handles dual monitors, arms, and heavy accessories
  • Supports tops up to roughly 80 inches wide
  • Dual motor with smooth, quiet height changes
  • Memory controller with four programmable presets

Could be better

  • Assembly is heavier and slower than the standard E7
  • Four legs eat into legroom and chair clearance
  • Premium over the standard E7 is hard to justify for narrow tops

Full Review

The standard FlexiSpot E7 is one of the best budget standing desk frames you can buy, but it has a known weakness — wobble at the top of its travel, especially on wider tops. The E7 Plus answers that with two more legs, a beefier crossbar, and a higher 440 lb capacity. It is not a redesign so much as a reinforcement, and that distinction matters when you decide whether the upgrade is worth $200 over the regular E7.

Where the Four Legs Actually Pay Off

At sitting height, the standard E7 and the E7 Plus feel nearly identical. The difference shows up above roughly 42 inches, where two-leg frames start to telegraph every keystroke. On a 70-inch top loaded with a 5K monitor, a monitor arm, and a mechanical keyboard, the E7 Plus stays composed. Lateral push at full height produces a small flex, not the head-bobbing sway you get from the standard E7 on the same setup.

The 440 lb capacity is mostly an insurance policy, but the increased width support is real. If you are running an 72-inch or 80-inch top — which a lot of dual-arm or ultrawide-plus-laptop setups need — the standard E7 is genuinely undersized. The E7 Plus is designed for that span.

Daily Use and Controls

The dual-motor setup moves the desk at about 1.4 inches per second, which is on par with the standard E7 and slower than premium frames like the Uplift V2 Commercial. The handset has four memory presets, a USB-A port, and an anti-collision sensor that works reliably. Noise is unobtrusive — you will hear it in a quiet room but not over a video call.

Cable management is the same passable tray-and-channel arrangement as the standard E7. Functional, not elegant.

E7 Plus vs. E7 Standard vs. Uplift V2 Commercial

If you are under 6 feet tall and running a 48–60 inch top, save the money and buy the standard E7. The wobble difference at your working heights is minimal. The E7 Plus earns its premium specifically when you are taller than average, use the desk above 44 inches regularly, or have a top wider than 65 inches. Those are the conditions where four legs change the feel.

Against the Uplift V2 Commercial, the E7 Plus is roughly $200–$300 cheaper but loses on finish, top selection, and the slightly faster motor. The Uplift’s V-frame design is also more rigid at extreme heights than the E7 Plus’s four-leg layout, though the gap is smaller than the price difference suggests.

Who Should Buy This

Buy the E7 Plus if you are tall, run a wide top (65+ inches), or have a heavy multi-monitor setup that pushes the standard E7 past its comfort zone. If you are average height with a 48–60 inch top and want to save money, the standard E7 is still the better value. If you want the absolute best feel at maximum height and are willing to pay for it, the Uplift V2 Commercial remains the benchmark — but the E7 Plus closes most of that gap for less.