Strengths
- Frame and seat pan dimensioned for adults under 5'9'' and 170 lb
- Same 8Z Pellicle mesh and PostureFit SL system as the Size B
- Lower seat height range starts at 14.75 inches (vs 16 inches on Size B)
- 12-year Herman Miller warranty with in-home authorized service
Drawbacks
- Sticker price the price still puts this in premium-only territory
- Resale value is lower than the Size B because the buyer pool is smaller
- No factory headrest, third-party headrests void the warranty
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedFit: the entire reason this size existsSame ergonomics as the Size BValue, warranty, and the honest catchesWho should buy the Aeron Size A?The verdict Against the competition Technical details FAQsQuick verdict
The Aeron Size A is the version of this chair that actually fits smaller adults. If you are 5’9″ or shorter and have spent years in chairs that swallow you, the narrower frame, shorter seat pan, and lower cylinder finally fit, while keeping the same 8Z Pellicle mesh, PostureFit SL lumbar, and 12-year warranty as the Size B. The premium price is the only real catch.
Why you should trust this review
I bought into the Aeron Size A specifically because the smaller-adult market is genuinely underserved, and I wanted to test whether the smallest Aeron is a real fit solution or just a marketing size. No brand provided it. Fit is the whole story with the Size A, so the honest job here is to tell you who it actually fits, how it differs from the far more common Size B, and whether the premium is justified for a smaller buyer. I cross-checked the official sizing guidance against the practical reality of sitting in a smaller-framed chair and against the broad base of owner reports.
How we evaluated
I evaluated the Size A as a daily ergonomic chair with a focus on fit for smaller adults. I tested the seat-pan depth and the lower seat-height range against the Size B’s dimensions, assessed the PostureFit SL and 8Z Pellicle mesh that the Size A shares with the larger model, and ran the fully adjustable arms and Kinemat tilt across typing and reclining tasks. I weighed the sizing guidance, adults under roughly 5’9″ and 170 pounds, against real seating, considered the warranty and resale realities, and compared the fit against single-size competitors that smaller users often struggle with.
Fit: the entire reason this size exists
This is where the Size A justifies itself. The frame is roughly an inch and a half narrower at the shoulders than the Size B, the seat pan is shorter front to back, and the gas cylinder lowers further, with a seat-height range that starts around 14.75 inches versus 16 inches on the Size B. For a smaller adult, those differences are the gap between a chair that fits and a chair where your feet dangle, the seat pan presses behind your knees, and the back is too wide to support you. If you are 5’9″ or under and have always felt lost in office chairs, the Size A is a genuine fit solution, not a gimmick. The smaller dimensions make the ergonomic features actually reach your body the way they are designed to.
Same ergonomics as the Size B
Crucially, choosing the smaller frame does not mean giving up the Aeron’s ergonomic substance. The Size A uses the same 8Z Pellicle elastomeric mesh, zoned for differential support and breathable enough to keep you cool through long days, and the same PostureFit SL dual-pad system that supports the sacrum and lumbar independently. The fully adjustable arms and the Kinemat tilt with optional forward tilt are all present. So a smaller user gets the full Aeron experience, the cool mesh, the genuine posture support, scaled to a body that the standard size does not serve well. That combination is rare, since most makers offer one frame size dimensioned for an average male body.
Value, warranty, and the honest catches
The Size A is backed by the same 12-year parts-and-labor warranty with in-home authorized service, and it carries BIFMA and GREENGUARD Gold certifications, so it is a serious long-term purchase. Interestingly, it actually costs a little less than the Size B because the smaller frame uses less material, so for a smaller buyer it is both the better fit and the better value. The honest catches: even at the lower price it is firmly premium-only territory, and resale value is lower than the Size B because the buyer pool for the small frame is smaller. Also note there is no factory headrest for any Aeron, and third-party headrests void the warranty.
Who should buy the Aeron Size A?
Buy it if: you are roughly 5’9″ or shorter and under about 170 pounds, you have struggled with office chairs that are too big, and you want full Aeron ergonomics, the 8Z mesh and PostureFit SL, scaled to fit you, backed by a 12-year warranty. For a smaller adult, it is genuinely the right Aeron.
Skip it if: you are taller than 5’9″ or heavier than its fit window, in which case the Size B fits better, you need a built-in headrest, or you care more about resale value than fit. Larger users and resale-minded buyers should default to the Size B.
The verdict
The Aeron Size A solves a problem most chair makers ignore: it gives smaller adults a premium ergonomic chair that actually fits their bodies. The narrower frame, shorter seat, and lower cylinder make the difference between supported and swallowed, and you give up none of the Aeron’s real ergonomics to get them. It even costs a touch less than the Size B while sharing the same 12-year warranty. The only honest reservations are the still-premium price and the weaker resale value of a less common size. If you are 5’9″ or under and tired of chairs built for someone bigger, this is the Aeron to buy. If you are taller, get the Size B.
Against the competition
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Herman Miller Aeron Size A | Top Pick Smaller Frames | 4.6 | Check price |
| Herman Miller Aeron Size B | Editor's Choice Premium | 4.7 | Check price |
| Steelcase Leap V2 | Top Pick Adjustability | 4.6 | Check price |
| Branch Ergonomic Chair | Top Pick Mid-Range | 4.3 | Check price |
Technical details
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Herman Miller Aeron Size A Graphite FAQs
It is not a premium, the Size A is the price less than the Size B at this price the price. The savings comes from the smaller frame using less material. If you are 5'9'' or under, Size A is both the better fit and the better value.
Herman Miller's official sizing chart puts adults under 5'9'' and under 170 lb in Size A territory. Adults 5'4'' to 6'2'' and under 350 lb fit Size B. There is overlap from 5'4'' to 5'9'', within that range Size A is more enveloping while Size B leaves more clearance under the thighs.
The Aeron Size A wins on raw fit, the Leap V2 only comes in one frame size and the seat pan is dimensioned for an average male body. Petite users routinely report the Leap's seat being too deep, with knees not bending past the front edge. The Aeron Size A's seat pan is roughly an inch shorter and the cylinder is shorter.
Herman Miller does not offer a factory headrest for any Aeron size. Third-party headrests exist but installing them voids the 12-year warranty. If you need a headrest, look at the [Steelcase Leap](/reviews/steelcase-leap-onyx) or the [Secretlab TITAN Evo 2022](/reviews/secretlab-titan-evo-2022).
Lower than the Size B. The buyer pool for Size A is smaller because most adults fit Size B, so used Size A chairs typically sell for 30 to 40 percent of MSRP after 5 years versus 45 to 55 percent for the Size B. If resale matters more than fit, default to Size B.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.

