Seat Height
15.5" – 22.5"
Seat Depth
15.75" – 19.75"
Back Height
25.5"
Seat Width
22"
Weight Capacity
500 lbs
Warranty
12 years
22.5" maximum explained — the highest ceiling of any major ergonomic chair. Recommended settings by height for 6'0"–6'6"+.
Read guide →Full fit analysis for users 6'0"–6'7"+. Why the 4" adjustable seat depth range is the key differentiator for tall users.
Read guide →500 lb BIFMA-tested capacity explained — how it compares to the Gesture (400 lbs) and Aeron Size C (350 lbs) for heavy and tall users.
Read guide →The Steelcase Leap Plus is the reinforced, extended-range variant of Steelcase's flagship Leap ergonomic chair. Where the standard Leap targets users up to 400 lbs with average proportions, the Plus extends every critical dimension upward: seat height reaches 22.5", seat depth adjusts up to 19.75", seat width widens to 22", back height grows to 25.5", and the weight capacity doubles to 500 lbs.
For tall users specifically, the Leap Plus has the highest seat height ceiling of any mainstream ergonomic chair — 22.5" as standard, with no aftermarket modifications required. Its 4-inch adjustable seat depth range (15.75"–19.75") is also the widest of the three top contenders, giving it the most dimensional flexibility for users with longer thighs or unusual proportions.
The Leap Plus runs on the same core technology as the standard Leap: LiveBack, which flexes and reshapes the backrest as you move to provide consistent lumbar and upper-back support without manual adjustment. The Natural Glide System allows the seat to slide forward as you recline, maintaining the pelvis-to-torso relationship that standard recline mechanisms disrupt. Both features matter more for tall users, whose longer torsos amplify the postural errors that static backrests create.
The primary trade-off is breathability. Like the Gesture, the Leap Plus uses fabric upholstery over foam rather than mesh. Users who run warm may notice heat retention during long sessions — a consideration if breathability ranks high in your priorities.
The 25.5" back height is the tallest of the three top contenders, providing upper-back and shoulder blade support that the Aeron (23.5") and Gesture (24") cannot match for users with the longest torsos. For users 6'4" and above, this translates to actual contact between the backrest and shoulder blades rather than the backrest ending mid-upper-back — a common failure of shorter chairs for very tall users.
Weight capacity of 500 lbs (BIFMA tested) is a meaningful differentiator for tall users who are also heavier. The Aeron Size C is rated to 350 lbs and the Gesture to 400 lbs. For tall users above 300 lbs, the Leap Plus's extended capacity provides structural confidence that the other two don't offer at the same level.
The Leap Plus isn't just a heavier-duty version of the standard Leap V2 — it's dimensionally larger in every direction. Both chairs share the same LiveBack and Natural Glide System technology, so the comparison is purely about size and capacity:
| Spec | Leap V2 | Leap Plus |
|---|---|---|
| Seat height (max) | 20" | 22.5" |
| Seat depth (max) | 18.5" | 19.75" |
| Seat width | 19.5" | 22" |
| Back height | 22" | 25.5" |
| Weight capacity | 400 lbs | 500 lbs |
For tall users, the back height jump from 22" to 25.5" is the most impactful change after the seat height ceiling. At 22", the standard Leap's backrest ends well below the shoulder blades of a 6'3"+ user. At 25.5", the Plus makes contact where it matters. The 2.5" gain in seat height (20" → 22.5") is what covers users who couldn't fit the standard Leap at all.
At my height, the Leap Plus set at maximum seat height (22.5") with a 30" desk gives roughly 2.5" of armrest clearance above the desk surface in typing position — sufficient, with room to spare. Seat depth at 19.75" maximum gives me a clean 2-finger clearance behind the knee. Those are the two measurements that come up short on every other chair evaluated for this height range. The Leap Plus clears both without aftermarket modifications.
When I was building the case for each chair at 6'4", the Leap Plus's seat depth spec was the single hardest argument to dismiss. The math is direct: at 6'4" with a 32" inseam, a typical seated thigh length (hip to knee) falls in the 19"–19.75" range. The Gesture maxes out at 18.75" — short by 0.25" to 1" for that profile. The Leap Plus reaches 19.75" — clearing the same measurement with a few millimeters of margin. On spec analysis alone, the Leap Plus is the cleaner fit for the full range of 6'4" body proportions, not just for users with above-average thigh length.
The seat depth differential was the strongest engineering argument the Leap Plus made against the Gesture during my research. A 1-inch advantage in seat depth isn't cosmetic. It's the difference between 2-finger clearance behind the knee (acceptable) and 2.5–3-finger clearance (genuinely comfortable). Over a full workday, that distinction compounds: the seat edge either stays neutral or subtly restricts popliteal circulation in a way you don't notice until you stand up. For users who are buying online without being able to test both chairs in person, the Leap Plus's dimensional margin is the lower-risk default. The spec analysis doesn't leave much ambiguity at this height.
I ultimately chose the Gesture over the Leap Plus — the 360-degree armrests and multi-device workflow mattered more than the extra seat depth margin for my specific setup, and the 18.75" depth was workable at my proportions. But I'd default to recommending the Leap Plus to most users at 6'4" who haven't verified their thigh length against both specs. The dimensional headroom is real and the risk of choosing wrong is lower.
The Leap Plus has genuine trade-offs worth knowing before spending $1,500+:
The Leap Plus is the strongest all-around choice for tall users above 6'4", users who need seat depths greater than 18.75", and users above 300–350 lbs. Its combination of 22.5" maximum seat height, 19.75" maximum seat depth, and 25.5" back height covers the widest range of tall-user body proportions of any chair in this category. For users in the 6'0"–6'3" range with average proportions who don't run warm, the Gesture or Aeron may offer a better feature match — but the Leap Plus works for nearly all tall users.
The Steelcase Leap Plus is the most dimensionally capable chair for tall users in the market. If your priority is covering the full range of tall-user proportions without worrying about fit failure, the Leap Plus is the safest choice. Its foam upholstery is a genuine trade-off against the Aeron's breathability, but for users who can tolerate it, no chair offers a more complete ergonomic package for tall bodies.