Build Quality
The IRmm tray is metal, which already puts it ahead of the plastic clip trays that crack within 6 months of supporting a power strip. The white powder-coat finish holds up against scuffs better than painted alternatives, and the January 2026 verified Walmart purchase reports no quality issues after daily use. That said, IRmm publishes no weight capacity figure anywhere - not on the product page, not on the packaging. The BTOD 24-inch white tray, which runs $50, specifies its load rating. The HumanScale NeatTech specifies 50 lbs. IRmm gives you nothing, which means you are guessing when you load it with a power strip and three adapters. For light cable management, this is probably fine. For anything heavier, it is a documented unknown.
The clamp hardware is standard - two clamps grip the desk edge, tightened by screws. Reviewers of comparable clamp-on trays note that thin desk edges under 1 inch can loosen over time. IRmm does not specify the edge thickness range the clamps accommodate, so measure your desk before ordering.
Comfort & Ergonomics
This is a cable tray, not an ergonomic accessory, but placement matters. Mounted flush under a standard 29-inch desk, the tray keeps cables 4-6 inches above the floor, which eliminates the primary tripping hazard in home offices. The white finish blends visually with light-colored desks rather than drawing the eye downward the way black trays do on white furniture. Users sitting at the desk for 8-hour workdays will not interact with the tray directly, but the reduction in visible cable clutter has a documented effect on perceived workspace organization - and perceived organization reduces low-level cognitive distraction during calls and focused work.
Adjustability
There is none. The tray is a fixed size - and again, that size is not published. Competitors like the StarTech cable management tray offer length-adjustable designs that telescope to fit desks from 19 to 33 inches. The IRmm is one fixed unit. If it does not fit your desk width, you cannot extend it. You also cannot reposition it mid-desk without fully loosening the clamps, sliding it, and re-tightening. For a static home desk, this is a non-issue. For a shared or modular workspace, it is a genuine limitation.
Assembly
Installation takes under 10 minutes for a standard desk edge. The clamp-on design requires a screwdriver - no drill, no wall anchors, no measuring for stud placement. You flip the tray upside down, position the clamps on the desk edge, tighten the screws, flip the tray down, and load your cables. Comparable clamp trays from Lukyamzn and VIVO report the same 10-minute window in user reviews. The IRmm Walmart review from January 2026 calls setup straightforward with no complaints about hardware quality. That matches the experience reported across the sub-$25 clamp tray category broadly.
Value for Money
At $14.44 on Walmart, this is the lowest price in the white metal clamp-on tray category as of early 2026. The Lukyamzn tray runs approximately $20 after discounts and measures 13.4 x 4.6 x 3.1 inches - at least you know what you are getting dimensionally. The VIVO tray hits $19.99 on sale with published specs and 30 reviews. The BTOD tray is $50 for 24 inches of confirmed coverage. The HumanScale NeatTech is $137.99 for 8 cable portals and a removable cover.
The IRmm sits at the floor of this market on price. If your cable situation is simple and you are comfortable buying a product with unpublished dimensions, $14.44 is genuinely hard to argue with. If you want even one extra data point - a published length, a weight rating, a confirmed clamp range - spend the extra $5 on the VIVO and get that information.
