Guides / Can you clamp a monitor arm to a glass desk?
Guide
Can you clamp a monitor arm to a glass desk?
Short answer: usually not with an edge clamp. A clamp concentrates force on one spot, and that's exactly how tempered glass fails — so most arm and desk makers prohibit clamping glass.
Why glass is different
Tempered glass is strong across its face but brittle at a point load. An edge clamp — especially under the leverage of a loaded arm — can crack or shatter it, sometimes days later. It's the one desk material where we default to doesn't fit.
Your real options
- Freestanding stand or riser — no clamp, no drilling.
- Through-glass grommet — only if the desk already has a hole; drilling tempered glass yourself is not advisable.
- A different surface — clamp to a nearby solid shelf or wall mount instead.
Glass desks in our database
| Desk | Material | Thickness | Clamp? | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glass desk (generic) | glass | varies | do NOT clamp (glass) | |
| Walker Edison Modern Glass Computer Desk (31") | glass | varies | do NOT clamp (glass) | page reported |
| Walker Edison L-Shaped Glass Corner Desk | glass | varies | do NOT clamp (glass) | page reported |
FAQ
Is it safe to clamp a monitor arm to a glass desk?
Generally no. Most monitor arms and glass desks explicitly warn against edge-clamping glass because the clamp's point load can crack tempered glass. Use a freestanding stand, an existing grommet hole, or a wall mount instead.
Are there monitor arms rated for glass desks?
A few C-clamp designs with wide rubber pads claim glass compatibility, but they're the exception and still risky on thin glass. If in doubt, don't clamp glass.