by Steve Steinitz on Jan 20, 2026.

Like many of us, I spend a large part of my day at my desk. Some of you may have heard about health issues from sitting too much. Have you heard the disturbing phrase "sitting is the new smoking"? I have observed that too much sitting, especially at a desk in front of a computer, can lead to specific health issues: back issues, pinched nerves, core muscle atrophy, reduced circulation.
Software Developers and similar knowledge workers may also experience an insidious issue. We often enter a trance state when we work and become unaware of our body, sometimes for hours. I've come out of such a trance and realized that I was uncomfortable, thirsty, cold...
I decided to try a treadmill desk. Currently they are expensive when compared to a desk plus treadmill of similar qualities - too expensive to justify an experiment. I feel that situation will change but in the mean time I pieced one together from three main parts:


After an hour or two of adjustments, I stepped on and started the treadmill at its default speed of 1km per hour and started working. Reading was easy but, at first, typing and navigating broke my stride. After a week, and after rigging up an arm rest my stride is more resilient. I'm typing this on the treadmill without issue. I'm moving 1.3 k per hour.
I first encountered the idea of a treadmill desk while researching ergonomic setups for software development. One developer had set up his treadmill desk a couple of years earlier and lamented that he wished he would have done it a decade earlier, avoiding his weight fluctuations.
Without any hype at all, I feel the treadmill desk has improved almost every aspect of my life. I feel more energetic and cheerful, I'm more inclined to start work earlier, my waist has shrunk to the smallest size I've measured in five years, a discomfort in my lower back is nearly gone, a minor nerve issue in my right leg is improving daily, my digestion is better...
Unexpectedly, my feet are happier - I had expected them to get sore. Instead, they get a continual massage and feel fine. If I stand working with the treadmill off, my feet start to get uncomfortable. That doesn't happen on the treadmill moving.
A couple of times I've gone into a software-development trance while walking on the treadmill and come out of it 3 hours later. After that I do feel like sitting down for a moment but I'm otherwise fine. I've brought a padded bar stool into the office which can sit on top of the treadmill in case I want to work sitting, more or less upright. I haven't wanted to use it yet.

For an investment of less than AUD$400 and with no permanent disruption to your work space, you can try out a treadmill desk. The treadmill desk can avoid issues related to to much sitting and bring massive, positive health benefits with, what seems to me, no real effort at all. Also, it's fun.
I predict that if you take the time to source the components and set them up optimally over a week or so, you'll never go back. I won't.