Quick Specs
Our Verdict
The Sihoo Doro C300 Pro V2 earns a very good verdict with 8D armrests, adjustable seat depth, lumbar support and a pull-out footrest - top-ten in a 35-chair field. Just check its sizing window if you are very short or tall.
How We Prepared This Review
Prepared by our editorial team using verified source material, product research, and a British-English editorial rewrite before publication.
- We review the working bundle for product facts, comparisons, and buyer-relevant tradeoffs before publishing.
- Non-English source material is translated into British English and rewritten into our house style without carrying over publication branding.
- Affiliate links and price references are handled separately from editorial judgements and never determine the verdict.
Affiliate links never determine our verdicts. Commercial relationships are disclosed separately from the editorial assessment, and we aim to keep buyer guidance clear, specific, and evidence-based.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Exceptional adjustability: 8D armrests, seat depth, lumbar, headrest
- Integrated pull-out footrest
- Breathable fabric and adaptive synchro-mechanism
- Stable frame rated to 150kg
- Easy-reach levers, simple cleaning
Cons
- Seat height tops out at 53cm - low for long legs
- Armrests start high (23cm above seat)
- Headrest does not rise far; no castor roll resistance
- Mid-range price is fair rather than friendly
Full Specifications
Key Features
Exceptional adjustability: 8D armrests, seat depth, lumbar, headrest
Integrated pull-out footrest
Breathable fabric and adaptive synchro-mechanism
Stable frame rated to 150kg
Easy-reach levers, simple cleaning
The Sihoo Doro C300 Pro V2 delivers ergonomic comfort for long days at the desk, earning a "very good" overall verdict and a top-ten place in a 35-chair field — though not for the very short or very tall.
Adjustability Is the Star
The breadth of adjustment stands out immediately. Beyond a height-adjustable backrest, the chair offers adjustable seat depth, a headrest that moves in height and tilt, and an adjustable lumbar support. The 8D armrests adapt with particular flexibility to different sitting positions, supporting the forearms properly both during focused work and when leaning back. A downward-sloping front seat edge relieves the thighs, the backrest's recline resistance is adjustable, and the back locks in three positions. The party piece is the integrated footrest, which pulls out when a short recovery break beckons — a genuine rarity at this level. Anyone pairing the chair with a sit-stand desk such as the Flexispot E7 Pro gets a remarkably complete ergonomic station.
Comfort and Build
The breathable fabric cover keeps heat down and feels pleasant over hours, while the metal frame gives a thoroughly stable impression — rated to a generous 150 kilograms. Sihoo's adaptive synchro-mechanism follows the body's movements, so back, shoulders and arms stay supported through frequent posture changes. Levers fall readily to hand, cleaning is uncomplicated, and the castors handle carpets and hard floors alike, lacking only a roll-away resistance.
Where It Fits — and Whom
The sizing window deserves attention before purchase. The seat tops out at 53 centimetres, which long legs may find low; the armrests start at a rather high 23 centimetres above the seat at their lowest; and the neck support does not rise especially far. Within the broad middle of the height range, however, the chair fits superbly — it is at the extremes that the limits show.
Value
At around 470 to 540 euros the C300 Pro V2 sits in the serious mid-range, where the pricing verdict lands at merely acceptable — the equipment justifies the money, but bargain it is not.
The Numbers Behind the Verdict
The detailed scoring fills out the picture. Seat comfort rates good, with the fabric seat surface contributing to the favourable climate; adjustability rates good across the board, as do cleaning and the reachability of the levers. The seat height spans 45 to 53 centimetres; the backrest locks at three angles with one tilt limit; and the full ergonomic checklist — adjustable lumbar, height-adjustable backrest, variable seat depth, height-adjustable, rotating and sliding armrests, height-adjustable and tilting headrest, stabilising front seat edge, adjustable recline resistance — reads yes in every row. Against a field whose winner costs anywhere from 190-euro budget picks to 899-euro premium loungers, the Sihoo's placing in the top quarter at a mid-table price marks it as the sensible enthusiast's choice rather than either extreme.
A Note on Assembly and Daily Use
Day to day, the adaptive mechanism is the feature that earns its keep: rather than demanding a manual tension change for every posture shift, it follows the sitter's weight through leaning, perching and reclining, which is precisely what makes multi-hour sessions survivable. The footrest stows entirely out of sight beneath the seat — colleagues will not know it is there until the lunch-break recline reveals it.
Verdict
A very good ergonomic chair with near-flagship adjustability — 8D armrests, seat depth, lumbar, locking recline and that footrest — wrapped in breathable fabric on a stable 150-kilogram-rated frame. Check your dimensions against its sizing window, and it rewards with all-day comfort.
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