Logitech is taking another swing at the long-desk-day problem, and this time it is not just tweaking specs or adding yet another productivity shortcut. With the new Signature Comfort Plus lineup, the company is leaning hard into the idea that your everyday mouse and keyboard should feel more like a cushion than a compromise, especially if you are parked at a desk for most of the day.
At the heart of this launch is a simple observation from Logitech: hybrid work is no longer an experiment; it is the default reality for a huge slice of knowledge workers. Nearly 80% of employees whose jobs can be done remotely are now working either hybrid or fully remote, which means a lot more time spent at home desks that were never really designed for eight-hour stretches. Logitech’s Signature series has always been the “everyday” side of its portfolio, sitting below the premium MX line in price and ambition, but still aimed at people who care about ergonomics and design. With Signature Comfort Plus, Logitech is trying to merge that approachable, no-fuss identity with more deliberate comfort-first hardware that recognizes just how blurry the line between work and life has become.
So what is actually new here? The headline product is the Signature Comfort Plus M850 L mouse, Logitech’s first model with a built-in cushioned palm support that extends out from the front of the shell. It is paired with a sculpted right-handed shape and rubber side grips, the kind of design that is clearly aimed at people who live in spreadsheets and documents all day rather than gamers chasing DPI numbers. Logitech says the palm cushion has been “real-world tested” and tuned for the way people actually work long desk days, which is a polite way of acknowledging that many of us are scrolling through email, hopping into meetings, and doom-scrolling social feeds on the same machine without ever really stepping away.
Alongside the standalone mouse, Logitech is also introducing the MK880 Signature Comfort Plus combo, which brings the same philosophy over to the keyboard. The keyboard is built around deep cushioned keys, a dual-foam palm rest, and a gently curved typing angle, with adjustable feet that let you choose between 0, 4, and 8 degrees of tilt. It is the kind of board that is not chasing ultra-slim minimalism or mechanical switch snappiness, but instead that “I can type on this all day and not think about it” feeling that a lot of mainstream office users actually need more than hot-swappable keycaps.
If you do not care about a palm cushion sticking out in front of your mouse, Logitech has a third option in the lineup: the Signature Comfort Plus M840 L. Functionally, it mirrors the M850 L in most respects but drops the integrated cushion for people who want a more traditional footprint or already have a favorite desk mat or wrist pad. Pricing lands squarely in Logitech’s midrange comfort zone: the M850 L comes in at $49.99, the M840 L at $39.99, and the MK880 combo at $99.99 in the US when they start rolling out globally from June 2026.
Under the hood, this is still very much a modern Logitech setup. The mice feature SmartWheel scrolling, which automatically shifts between precise line-by-line scrolling and fast free-spin style scrolling, and they use Logitech’s silent click tech to keep noise down in shared or hybrid spaces. The keyboard is tuned for a quieter typing profile as well, which matters if you are working from a small apartment, a shared space, or a hot-desking office where nobody wants to hear that one colleague hammering away on blue switches. Both the mouse and keyboard support Easy-Switch, so you can pair them with up to three devices and hop between a work PC, a personal laptop, and a tablet or phone with a tap of a button.
That multi-device angle has quietly become one of Logitech’s strongest selling points. Earlier Signature series mice, such as the M750, already leaned into this “one mouse, many devices” idea, and reviewers have often called it one of the easiest ways to simplify a multi-computer desk setup. In an era where you might be juggling a corporate Windows laptop, a personal MacBook, and a tablet for note-taking, that frictionless switching can be the difference between sticking with one ecosystem or constantly dealing with dongles and pairing menus.
Customisation is handled through Logitech’s now-standard software stack: Logi Options+ for personal users and Logi Tune for some of the meeting-specific controls. In Logi Options+, you can personalise both the mouse buttons and keyboard keys, assign Smart Actions to automate repetitive workflows, or use a dedicated AI Launch Key to jump straight into your preferred assistant, whether that is Copilot, Gemini, or ChatGPT. For video calls, Logi Tune integration lets you assign functions to Zoom Workplace and Microsoft Teams, which fits neatly into Logitech’s broader push to turn keyboards and mice into soft control surfaces for collaboration tools rather than just passive input devices.
Battery life is rated in years, not months, which is another sign that this lineup is aimed at people who want to buy something once and just let it fade into the background. Logitech claims up to three years on the keyboard and up to two years on the mice, depending on usage. Long battery life may not be the sexiest spec to put on a box, but anyone who has had a mouse die in the middle of a presentation or a deadline knows how quickly that becomes a differentiator.
There is also a clear enterprise story here. Alongside the consumer versions, Logitech is offering Signature Comfort Plus for Business models, including an M850 L for Business and an MK880 combo for Business. These ship with a Logi Bolt USB-C receiver, which provides more secure, robust wireless connectivity in crowded office environments and ties into Logitech’s growing push to treat keyboards and mice as managed devices rather than random accessories. IT teams can monitor and manage these peripherals through Logitech Sync, gaining centralized visibility into device and firmware status across fleets of employees, much like they already do with meeting room gear.
This enterprise angle matters because Logitech already holds a leading share in several peripheral segments, including mice, keyboards, and gaming gear, which gives it the scale to roll out new lines globally and support them over time. In the ergonomic keyboard space specifically, Logitech and Microsoft are often cited as the two dominant brands, particularly for business and office deployments, which means that even modest tweaks to their mainstream lines can ripple out across thousands of desks. Signature Comfort Plus is clearly designed to slot into that story: it is comfortable and friendly enough for home users, but also predictable, secure, and manageable enough that IT departments will not balk at deploying it.
Comfort is no longer just a nice-to-have, either. The global market for ergonomic mice and keyboards is expected to grow from around $15.19 billion in 2024 to roughly $23.37 billion by 2033, riding a compound annual growth rate of about 4.8%. That is not explosive consumer gadget growth, but it is steady, structural demand driven by the simple reality that more work is happening at screens, for longer stretches, and companies cannot ignore repetitive strain or long-term well-being issues as easily as they used to. Products like Signature Comfort Plus aim to capture that middle tier: more ergonomic and thought-through than the bargain-bin combos bundled with PCs, but not as niche or expensive as some of the more exotic split or tented keyboards.
From a design perspective, Logitech is also leaning on its now-familiar sustainability story. The plastic parts across the Comfort Plus lineup use between 49% and 77% certified post-consumer recycled plastic, depending on the color, which helps reduce the carbon footprint and pushes more material back into circulation. Packaging is FSC-certified paper, and the emphasis on long battery life has a sustainability angle too, since fewer batteries being swapped and discarded over the lifetime of a product is a tangible, if modest, environmental win. It is consistent with what Logitech has been doing across other lines, including the earlier Signature MK650 combos and various MX-branded products that have made heavy use of recycled plastics.
So where does Signature Comfort Plus sit in Logitech’s crowded catalog? If you imagine the range as a spectrum, with ultra-basic, no-frills office gear at one end and the premium MX Master and MX Keys on the other, the existing Signature series occupies that middle sweet spot of “good enough for most people without being expensive.” Comfort Plus is essentially Logitech saying that comfort deserves to be a first-class feature in that middle zone, not just a perk you get if you are willing to step up to a more expensive ergonomic line. For many US-based hybrid workers who are already juggling multiple devices and collaboration tools, that framing is likely to resonate more than another spec bump or a slight DPI increase.
If you are a gamer or a mechanical keyboard enthusiast, this lineup is not trying to win you over; Logitech already has dedicated gaming gear for that audience under the G and PRO Series brands. Instead, Signature Comfort Plus is very clearly aimed at office workers, students, and home users who want something soft, quiet, and smart enough to handle their daily mix of docs, calls, and browsing without fuss. It is the sort of gear you could roll out across a remote-first team without needing to explain much beyond, “Pair it to your laptop, hit these keys to switch devices, and you’re good.”
Ultimately, what makes this launch interesting is not that Logitech has invented a radical new form factor, but that it is pushing comfort and manageability further into the mainstream of its everyday lineup. As hybrid and remote work continue to settle into a long-term pattern, peripherals that feel invisible in use – quietly comfortable, quietly secure, quietly manageable – are likely to carry more weight in purchase decisions than flashy features. Signature Comfort Plus fits neatly into that future: not a revolution, but a clear sign that Logitech sees the long desk day as a design problem worth solving, not just surviving.
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