Build Quality
The Naspaluro arrives with a nylon wheel base and four polyurethane casters rated for hard floors. The manufacturer's own documentation warns against swapping those casters - if that warning exists on a £60 chair, take it seriously. It signals that the base hub tolerances are calibrated specifically for the original wheel diameter and load distribution. Swap them out and you risk cracking the hub under normal sitting weight. The mesh itself is described as wear-resistant polyester, which in practice means it will hold its shape through moderate daily use but should not be expected to perform like the Pellicle mesh on a Herman Miller at 15 times the price. Frame construction is steel, which is appropriate at this tier, though weld quality at budget-level Chinese manufacturing varies by production run. No recalls or widespread 2026 quality control alerts have been documented for model K233/0K081.
Comfort & Ergonomics
The S-shaped backrest provides passive lumbar support through the curve of the mesh rather than an adjustable pad or dial. For users between 5'3" and 5'8" with average torso proportions, this aligns reasonably well with the natural lumbar curve. Outside that range, it is a fixed curve on a fixed frame - it supports whoever it happens to fit. The high-density sponge seat cushion is adequate for sessions up to 5 hours; beyond that, expect noticeable pressure on the sit bones because there is no waterfall front edge and the foam density is not specified by the manufacturer. The headrest exists and is included, but at a mid-back chair height of 100 cm total, it will contact the back of your head rather than your neck on most adult frames, reducing its practical value during reclined rocking.
Adjustability
You get four adjustments: seat height via the SGS Grade 3 gas lift lever, 360-degree swivel, flip-up armrests, and a rocking recline on select variants capped at approximately 120 degrees. That is a reasonable set for £60. What you do not get is adjustable armrest height, adjustable lumbar position, adjustable seat depth, or tilt tension control. The Hbada E3 at £110 adds adjustable lumbar and tilt tension. The Sihoo M57 at £130 adds seat depth adjustment. If any of those missing adjustments are on your requirement list, this chair will disappoint you within the first week. If none of them are on your list, the Naspaluro's adjustment set covers basic ergonomic needs without the complexity of chairs that have seven levers and no clear instructions.
Assembly
No official assembly time is published, but the component count - base, gas lift cylinder, seat pan, backrest, armrests, headrest, and casters - is standard for this chair category. Budget for 20 to 30 minutes and expect instructions that are diagram-heavy and text-light, which is typical for Chinese-manufactured chairs at this price. The casters press-fit into the base without tools. The gas lift drops into the base mechanism. No reports of missing hardware have surfaced in available 2026 listings, but inspect all components before discarding packaging.
Value for Money
At £59.99 - the lowest confirmed street price as of 2026 ManoMano listings - this is a fair chair for what it is. The SGS-certified gas lift is a concrete differentiator over unlabeled competitors at £50. The flip-up armrests add real desk compatibility that fixed-arm chairs at this price cannot match. The pink colorway is one of the few genuine style options in the sub-£70 mesh chair market, which is otherwise dominated by black and grey.
The honest ceiling on this chair's value is around 5 hours of daily use on a frame under 225 pounds. Past that ceiling, the fixed lumbar, basic cushion, and budget construction will cost you in comfort or replacement costs within 18 months. If your budget stretches to £110, the Hbada E3 is a meaningfully better chair. If £60 is the hard limit, the Naspaluro is the most defensible choice in that bracket.




