Secretlab’s 2026 Spring Sale is live, and it’s one of the rare moments when the brand’s premium pricing actually bends in a meaningful way. The headline deal is up to $100 off the Secretlab Titan Evo gaming chair line, but the real sleeper hit is the discount on the Magnus Pro sit-to-stand desk—up to $129 off—plus regional deals on Skins and accessories that can refresh an existing setup for less.
If you’ve been circling a limited edition, officially licensed design (or you’ve just been waiting for Secretlab’s “investment purchase” to feel slightly less painful), this is the window—because the sale is time-limited and, as always with popular collabs, stock won’t last forever.
The Big Deals: Titan Evo chairs and Magnus desks lead the sale
Let’s start with the core of what most people care about: the chairs. Secretlab’s Spring Sale discounts apply to the Titan Evo series, with savings of up to $100 (US), $130 (Canada), and £100 (UK). That’s the kind of cut that actually changes the conversation around Secretlab, because the Titan Evo is often praised for comfort and adjustability—but its price is usually the one sticking point for buyers on the fence.
In the US, the standard Titan Evo starts at $579, and the sale can bring it down to as little as $479 depending on the configuration. That’s still not “budget chair” territory, but it’s a much more compelling entry point for a chair that’s positioned as a long-haul, daily-driver upgrade rather than a disposable piece of furniture you’ll replace in two years.
On the desk side, Secretlab is also discounting its Magnus Pro standing desk by up to $129 (US) and £94 (UK). The Magnus (non-Pro) desk is also included, discounted by up to $90 (US), $100 (Canada), and £50 (UK). If you’ve ever priced out a full desk-and-chair overhaul and backed away slowly, this is the first time in a while where doing both at once feels even remotely rational.
There are also notable regional extras. In the UK, the Classic NAPA chair is listed at £200 off, and the Neue chair is £100 off. Meanwhile, Skins—Secretlab’s swappable chair covers—are discounted by up to 10% in the US and up to 30% in Canada and the UK, with selected accessories and merchandise discounted by up to 20% across regions.
Why the Titan Evo is the star (and why themed editions matter)
Secretlab’s Titan Evo isn’t just popular because it’s a “gaming chair.” It’s popular because it’s one of the few chairs in the space that has built a reputation around tunable ergonomics and modular customization—two things that matter when you’re sitting for work, play, or both.
The Titan Evo’s feature set is positioned around long-session comfort: it uses cold-cure foam designed to distribute pressure and adapt over time, and it includes a four-way lumbar support system intended to better match the curve of your lower back. It also comes in three sizes, which is a bigger deal than people admit—fit is everything with chairs, and “one size fits all” is usually code for “one size fits nobody perfectly.”
Then there’s the part that Secretlab has arguably mastered better than anyone: licensed, limited edition themed designs. This sale is especially relevant if you’re the kind of buyer who doesn’t just want “a chair,” but wants your chair—the one that matches your battlestation, your fandom, and your vibe on camera.
During the sale, Titan Evo designs span a huge range of looks and materials, from standard leatherette and fabric options to Special Edition colorways and collaborations. The lineup of franchises and games called out includes Star Wars, Pokémon, Genshin Impact, and Cyberpunk 2077, among others. There’s also a Monster Hunter Wilds variant highlighted for its “regal” aesthetic, and Secretlab’s more recent Pokémon push includes a Gengar Titan Evo design.
That’s the hook: Secretlab isn’t just selling ergonomics—it’s selling identity. And when those designs are tied to big-name IP, they can disappear fast, especially in popular sizes. If you’ve ever tried to buy a specific limited edition chair colorway only to find it backordered (or worse, gone), you already know how this goes.
The Magnus Pro desk discount is the real “grown-up” upgrade
Chairs get the glamour, but desks are where setups either look clean and intentional—or like a cable-management crime scene. Secretlab’s Magnus Pro is included in the Spring Sale, and it’s the kind of product that appeals to a very specific type of enthusiast: someone who wants a desk that looks like it was designed for modern PC gaming, not adapted from office furniture.
The Magnus Pro is a sit-to-stand desk with adjustable height, built from steel, and it leans hard into the “premium workstation” pitch. One of its most distinctive features is its approach to power and cable routing: it uses an integrated power column that runs a single cable down the leg, aiming to keep the setup looking clean without the usual tangle of power strips and dangling cords.
The Magnus Pro also supports a range of magnetic accessories, which is one of those features that sounds gimmicky until you’ve lived with it. Once you can snap on and reposition accessories without breaking out tools or adhesive mounts, it’s hard to go back. Secretlab’s ecosystem includes items like desk mats, monitor arms, and other add-ons designed around that magnetic compatibility.
Pricing-wise, the Magnus Pro typically starts at $988, and the sale offers up to $129 off MSRP. Again: it’s not cheap. But it’s a meaningful discount on a product category where “good” and “cheap” rarely overlap—especially if you want a standing desk that doesn’t wobble, doesn’t look like a corporate cubicle hand-me-down, and doesn’t force you into a cable spaghetti compromise.
And yes, there’s a lifestyle angle here that’s becoming increasingly real for a lot of PC players: standing desks aren’t just for productivity influencers anymore. If you’re spending long hours at a PC, the ability to change posture—sit, stand, and everything in between—can be the difference between “I’m fine” and “why does my back feel like a side quest boss.”
Sale dates, regions, and what’s actually confirmed
Secretlab’s Spring Sale is live in the US, Canada, and the UK, and it began on March 19, 2026. The end date depends on where you live:
- US & Canada: runs through March 31, 2026
- UK: runs through April 10, 2026
The discounts vary by region and product category. The key confirmed deal caps include:
- Titan Evo (chairs): up to $100 (US) / $130 (CA) / £100 (UK) off
- Magnus Pro (desks): up to $129 (US) / £94 (UK) off
- Magnus (desks): up to $90 (US) / $100 (CA) / £50 (UK) off
- Skins: up to 10% off (US) / up to 30% off (CA & UK)
- Selected accessories & merchandise: up to 20% off
- UK-only callouts: Classic NAPA £200 off, Neue £100 off
One more practical note: the sale is described as running while supplies last. That matters most for limited edition themed gaming chairs and specific sizes—because the most popular combinations are usually the first to go.
How I’d approach this sale (if you’re trying to be smart about it)
Secretlab sales are rarely about turning premium gear into bargain-bin steals. They’re about shaving enough off the top to make a “someday” purchase feel like a “now” purchase—especially if you’ve already decided you want Secretlab’s specific mix of design, branding, and feature set.
Here’s the move:
- If you need a chair and you’ve been eyeing the Titan Evo, the up to $100 off is the cleanest justification you’re going to get in the near term. The Titan Evo is positioned as a versatile chair with multiple sizes, swappable elements, and a big design catalog—so you’re not just buying comfort, you’re buying options.
- If you already own a Titan Evo and you’re bored of the look, the Skins discount (up to 30% in some regions) is the most cost-effective way to “upgrade” without replacing the whole chair.
- If your setup is held back by cable clutter or you want a standing desk, the Magnus Pro discount is the one that can change your day-to-day experience the most. It’s not as flashy as a limited edition chair backrest, but it’s the kind of upgrade you feel every single time you sit down.
And if you’re someone who cares about aesthetics: the themed designs are the point. Secretlab’s collaborations—spanning franchises like Pokémon, Star Wars, Genshin Impact, and Cyberpunk 2077—are exactly why people pay Secretlab prices in the first place. A sale that makes those designs easier to justify is going to pull a lot of fence-sitters off the fence.
What Remains Unknown
- Whether any additional regions beyond the US, Canada, and UK are included in the 2026 Spring Sale.
- The full list of eligible limited edition designs and which specific configurations receive the maximum discount (details vary by product and region).
- Exact inventory levels for the most popular themed Titan Evo designs and sizes; availability is expected to fluctuate during the sale.



