Worky Home Office in a box review – Everything you need to WFH

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REVIEW – With Working From Home becoming the norm for many, what do you do if you don’t have a full-time space to devote to your work life? Rent a hotel room every day? Kick one of your kids out of their bedroom? Or use the dining table, and deal with tearing down the makeshift workplace you created every afternoon when it’s time to get ready for dinner? Worky has a better idea: The Home Office! I was sent one to review and want to share it with you. I think you’ll dig it!

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For size comparisons, that’s a full-sized 12.9″ iPad Pro in a Magic Keyboard and a full sized Ti Arto EDC pen (https://bigidesign.com/collections/pens/products/ti-arto-edc-pen). This is not a tiny project box.

What is it?

The Worky Home Office is a foldable case that contains power management, a whiteboard, and task lighting, plus space for a laptop, tablet, letter-sized notebooks, pens, sticky notes, and other ephemera of your desk life back at that office you used to go to.

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What’s in the box?

A single sturdy box made of hard plastic, covered with textured vinyl material. It is held shut with polished silver steel hardware. It attaches to the grid with a single 4 foot power cable.

  • The Box
  • Power Cord

Hardware specs

From company website

  • Built In Power and Device Charging
  • Built In Video Conferencing Light (high and low setting)
  • Built In Storage
  • Magnetic Dry Erase Board
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I plugged my Apple Watch charger in for a sense of scale – plus, it was needing a charge while I was working on the photos for this article! Very handy!

Design and features

The Home Office arrives as a solidly packed box. There is a little padding around it (happily so, since the carrier had poked holes into the outer box!), but not too much. There is a single sheet of instructions that is simpler than anything IKEA has ever printed. Quick outside dimensions: 26” x 3.75” x 16” There is a handle on one long edge, and a single snap bracket on each of the short edges. (There are detailed photos of the hardware further down.) On the opposite long edge, there are two hard plastic hinges, built to do double duty holding up the unit when folded, and also holding it open when set up for use. One look at the instruction sheet will help you understand this.

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Plopped this page on the cover of the papers compartment, set the lighting to the dim setting, and it completely removed my shadows from the overhead light!

When you open the unit, the insides are a bright white with cobalt blue accents in the form of transparent hard acrylic lids to the three storage compartments. More on these below. The top of the unit is braced open by a manual tab you twist into place. (This won’t prevent a determined person from shutting it, but it will keep it from flopping down in the middle of you turning away for a second during that Zoom call when you’re presenting to the CEO!) Shutting it with the lock engaged will break the lock, since it’s only plastic, so pay attention when quitting time comes and you’re packing up. If you feel resistance, stop and check.

The inside of the lid is a magnetic whiteboard. You can draw, notate, stick fridge magnets to it, whatever. Around the perimeter of this is affixed a two-level LED lighting strip. You can use it for video call lighting, or stay out on the screen porch after the kids are in bed to finish up a few details without having to bring along a headlamp.

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To give you an idea of the illumination provided, I took two selfies with the den overhead light on, with the Home Office sitting on the ottoman in front of my loveseat in the TV area, and just one take.

Once you decide on where to place it and open it, here’s what you’ll find:
On the left, there is a place for a laptop, which will hold up to a 15+” machine. Just behind this is a lidded compartment that fits the included power cable with plenty of extra room for things like phone chargers, cables for charging your tablet and other electronic niggles. Not enough room for a full laptop charger for most brands, but we’re not finished.

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That cutout in the mold tells me there were earlier iterations of this unit that used this compartment differently. But there are no other indications of the earlier design.

Just to the right of that compartment is a dual AC outlet, a USB A and USB C outlet, and a push-button to toggle the lighting between off/full/dim. Note that there is no high-speed USB charging built-in. There’s nothing to stop you from using one of those 110V outlets for a 20-Watt charger, though!

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On the right side, there are two main lidded compartments: one is a generous 10” x 12” x 1.75” for paperwork. (Phone power cords and laptop chargers could also go here, if you’re more digital and less analog. This is your office, remember! Heck, there’s enough room for a ring light and microphone if you’re going to record a podcast on location!)

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Full-sized school composition book, 3″x3″ sticky note pad, and the included guide materials.

Below that (toward the user) is a “pencil drawer” that measures 10” x 2.5” x 1.75”.

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Setup

Out of the box, the only thing you’ll need to do is open the sealed bag around the power cord. Find a place you can set it down that’s near power (if you need it) and you’re ready. Note that you don’t have to have power to use the Home Office. But, if you need power, it’s a single simple connection.

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If you’re one who uses full headphones for video conferences, there is a hook on the upper left that swings out for you to store them when not in use. Remove them before folding up the Home Office. Also, consider wireless earbuds. (Not judging, but really, I am.)

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Performance

This thing is the definition of simplicity. I hope they have it patented to death, because the concept is quite obvious, once you see it. I was delighted with it the instant it came out of the box, and didn’t have a Zoom meeting scheduled for four days! Here are some detailed shots of the hardware and the textured vinyl covering. (I think it looks like a car top vinyl-covered hardtop or Landau roof. Who remembers those?)

During recent days of the pandemic, I’ve either been working from the company-provided iMac (which shares a desk and keyboard with my personal Mac mini) in my office, or, more usually, wandering about the house with my iPad Pro, typing and taking meetings where ever I happen to be. I’m sure those in my Spanish class get seasick as I wander around getting settled for our sessions. With the Home Office, I can put my Spanish Reading book, notepads, and a pen or two into their own place, and have it all ready whether I want to set up on the deck, the dining room, or the front porch. Good lighting and my materials will be at hand where ever I am!

What I like

  • Thoughtful organization without over-specialization
  • Dual Lighting for on-camera and off-camera illumination
  • Quality hardware for handle and clasps

What I’d change

  • The translucent acrylic covers are stiff and loud – make them quieter and softer
  • A padded lining inside the stationery boxes – I’m thinking of doing this with some stick-on textured material

Final thoughts

Used to be, you could set up your home office with a laptop and a folder of papers and maybe a power adapter. You were only going to be there a few hours, at most, right? How’s that working out after 2020? Yeah, you need lighting for video meetings, places for all your project notes, not just the current one, and probably a power solution for your phone and tablet, as well as your laptop. Worky has your back! The Home Office, like the roll top desk of old, is a place to have all your stuff stored and ready, but easily concealable. Snap it shut, slide it under your bed, sideboard, or in that space between the fridge and the oven, and no one has to know this room is also your office. Carry it out to your car if you’re going out of town, across town for a meeting, or even to a coffee shop for the afternoon. I’ve seen folks with full monitors set up in cafes, so this is not going to be the craziest thing the baristas have seen! Once you’ve “moved in”, your office is anywhere you want to go.

Price: $149.99
Where to buy: The Home Office website
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Worky.

9 thoughts on “Worky Home Office in a box review – Everything you need to WFH”




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  2. I want to hate this product. My initial response is STUPID, but…. I find myself liking this. Now it’s not useful for me when working from home, as I have setup a nice area to work from now. However when I travel and am moving from conference room to conference room, and temporary desks at the office (most of our offices are first come first serve in seating now) I really LIKE this. Tho for a purpouse exactaly the oposite of it’s intended purpouse.

    I would love to see two changes. One make the power cord retractable, like a vacuume from the 1960’s, and place USB ports INSIDE the storage areas. This way I could leave items hooked up and charging like my headset, mouse, extra battery etc.

    1. I had exactly the same reaction initially. But as I looked at it, I thought, “This is actually a good idea for those who don’t have the luxury of a dedicated office space.” Re: charging while closed – There’s nothing to stop you from putting a battery pack with your headphones or other gadgets attached in any of the compartment and letting them charge while closed. There may not be good clearance for plugging in the built in outlet while closed.

      1. Yes, this was the scenario I envisioned. I would have a seperate battery pack, headphones, etc that stayed in the case. The case would then sit at the door plugged in. I just unplug it, grab it, walk out the door. Everything is charged and fresh and ready for a day at the office.

  3. ’73 Dodge Dart in Aztec Gold (sparkly brown) with pebbly vinyl hardtop. Loved that car! Had it into the early 90s.
    I just got a laptop for work to replace the mini desktop, so we can start hybrid working when the office reopens in January. I’ll have 2 docking stations, but I am really wracking my brain to come up with a reason to need one of these! If they’d had these at the start of the pandemic, they’d have made an instant killing!

    Definitely all the sales people will have to have one. Anyone who works from home and needs to get away from home for a coffee or an afternoon at the park. I can picture each kid in a family having one of these, doing homework on the kitchen island (because according to HGTV, everyone is adding one to their home), then neatly closing them up to clear the space when dinner’s ready.

    Genius, and a great price point to defend against the inevitable knockoffs.

  4. I’m planning on a career change, or actually, the same field but a lot more mobile. Visiting multiple facilities, and client homes, I will have no assigned work area. This work station will come in handy. What I would change? I need adjustable, retractable legs, with a height of 29”. This work station would have a dual purpose. Open, of course it’ll be my office, but closed, it will be my sterile field staging area. Unfortunately, it doesn’t have legs, so a small portable folding camping table that I could sling over my shoulder is going to have do, with a folding stool. A lot to carry, but I’m a creature of comfort.

    1. Yeah, the legs might be good for some, even those not working outside the home, but I think the basic model that just requires table space was the right path, at least initially. Good luck in your new flex, and let us know how your setup evolves. You may want to check out some of the portable power options we’ve reviewed lately.

  5. Yeah, it would be nice to have a built-in battery, but then it would have had a much higher price, and it would now have older, built-in tech. Even the USB is out-of-date now. Back in 2021, GaN power adapters were unheard of. Now they are commonplace and quite powerful.
    I think keeping the price low and building out all the good storage options (that can easily accommodate loads of flexible batteries!) was the right play. It’s the bones of a desk setup (storage, lighting, power outlet, whiteboard) without the things that differ greatly between users’ preferences (power needs beyond 110 volt AC, video, camera connections, etc.)

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