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Remote Work Setup Checklist

A practical checklist for making a laptop-first work setup more comfortable and reliable.

By SoloFaves Editorial · Published Jun 5, 2026 · Updated Jun 5, 2026

Audience
Remote workers and digital nomads
Estimated cost
$150-$600
Difficulty
Beginner

Tools used

  • Notion

Gear used

  • Laptop Stand
  • USB-C Hub
  • Noise-Canceling Headphones
  • Webcam

Steps

  1. Raise the screen so your neck is not angled down all day.
  2. Add a keyboard and mouse if the laptop is on a stand.
  3. Fix lighting before upgrading the camera.
  4. Use headphones or a microphone that makes calls clear.
  5. Keep a small cable kit in the bag.
  6. Test calls before the first important meeting.

Why this order works

Most remote work setup advice jumps too quickly to expensive gear. The basics matter more: screen height, typing comfort, lighting, sound, power, and reliable connections.

If your laptop is flat on the table, a better webcam will not fix posture. If your room is dark, a 4K camera will still look bad. If your audio is poor, people will notice that before they notice video quality.

Minimum viable setup

Start with a laptop stand, external keyboard, mouse, decent light, and headphones. That combination is enough for many solo workers and costs less than a single premium monitor.

Travel version

For travel, focus on compact gear: a folding stand, small keyboard, USB-C hub, power bank, and a cable pouch. A portable monitor is worth it only if you truly need a second screen for writing, coding, editing, or research.

Final check

Before important calls, test camera angle, microphone input, lighting, and internet stability. A five-minute check prevents the kind of friction that makes remote work feel less professional.

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