
Office chairs have largely operated on a color vocabulary of one. Black. Occasionally dark gray. The reasoning is defensible enough: a chair meant to work in any office, boardroom, or home studio needs to disappear into the background, and neutrals are the safest way to guarantee that. The Aeron has lived by that rule since its 2016 remaster, offering four restrained options that leaned charcoal and graphite and asked very little of the rooms they occupied.
Herman Miller is breaking from that constraint in 2026, though only just. The two new Aeron colors, Jasper and Nightfall, aren’t a departure toward the bold or the playful. Jasper is an earthy olive green calibrated to read almost as a neutral while gesturing toward the biophilic design sensibility that has been moving through workplace interiors for several years. Nightfall is a sophisticated midnight blue already present across the MillerKnoll portfolio, added partly to make specifying a cohesive space easier.
Designer: Herman Miller

The full palette now sits at six hues, Onyx, Graphite, Carbon, Mineral, Jasper, and Nightfall, all drawn from natural references and all quietly confident about their ability to belong without demanding attention. For designers specifying a lounge, a studio, or a home office with a more considered material palette, those two additions open the door to pairings that the existing neutrals couldn’t quite reach. The chair’s structure and ergonomics stay entirely intact.

But the more substantive changes in this update aren’t visible from across the room. The team mapped where the chair carried the most weight and substituted in lighter materials, including post-industrial recycled content and bio-based nylons, with the result that the chair’s global average embodied carbon drops by 12% compared to the previous version.


That 12% follows years of prior reductions. In 2021, the Aeron became the first Herman Miller chair to incorporate ocean-bound plastic. As of June 2026, the company has diverted more than 660 metric tons of that material since its last tally in 2023, the equivalent of roughly 79 million plastic water bottles. Today, the Aeron is composed of more than 50% recycled content and is up to 91% recyclable, carrying both BIFMA Level 3 and Indoor Advantage Gold certifications.


Size inclusivity received a quiet update as well. The Aeron has always come in three sizes, A, B, and C, covering nearly the full range of human body types. Recent testing confirmed that the largest size, C, now meets all structural requirements to support users up to 400 lb, a formal expansion of what the existing design had been capable of without being officially stated.
The new Aeron is debuting at Fulton Market Design Days in Chicago, June 8 through 10, as part of an exhibition called “Living with Change.” It’s available now through hermanmiller.com, Herman Miller showrooms, and MillerKnoll dealers, starting at around $1,520 in base configurations and $2,050 for fully specified versions. The new colors arrive on a chair that already sells one unit every 17 seconds, which says most of what needs to be said about whether the core design needed changing.
