Want a clear, data-backed read on secondhand furniture in 2025? Here’s the picture: demand for pre-owned home goods is rising, buyers are value-hunting, and supply keeps flowing from frequent moves and style refreshes. Below is Remoov’s practical guide to this market, paired with the latest public data so you can price, buy, or sell with confidence.
Key takeaways
- Secondhand demand is sturdy in 2025. U.S. shoppers continue to shift spending toward recommerce as new-goods prices stay elevated and sustainability matters more to buyers. Home goods are among the most sought-after categories, and price sensitivity has intensified.
- New-furniture inflation cooled, which nudges used pricing to be sharper. Overall inflation kept easing in late 2024, and the furniture category reflected that slower price growth. Result: buyers expect better deals on used pieces and reward clean listings with fair, transparent pricing.
- Resale momentum is widespread across platforms. OfferUp’s 2025 outlook calls recommerce “recession-proof,” with home and furniture specifically called out for strong buyer interest and cost relief vs retail.
- Brand and build quality still drive resale value. Marketplace reports repeatedly show higher retention for well-made and design-forward labels compared with fast-assembly pieces. Vintage and design classics remain liquid.
- Global market size is growing. Analysts tracking the second-hand furniture market expect continued expansion through the decade, supported by sustainability goals and cost savings.
How we built the 2025 Furniture Resale Index
What it is: A practical pricing compass to help sellers and buyers set expectations quickly.
What we consider: Condition, material, original retail, style desirability, brand recognition, age, and local supply/demand.
How to use it: Find your category below, map your piece to a band, then fine-tune with brand and condition notes.
Important: We pair our marketplace experience with public data on consumer demand and pricing trends. Where exact brand-level resale rates vary by city and condition, we provide ranges and directional guidance rather than single “street prices.”
2025 pricing bands by category
Sofas and sectionals
- Design-forward & premium (e.g., Ligne Roset, Herman Miller seating, Roche Bobois, higher-end West Elm lines): typically 45–70% of original retail if stain-free, structurally sound, and professionally cleaned. Stronger interest for iconic silhouettes and durable performance fabrics.
- Mid-market retail (CB2, Article, West Elm basics, Room & Board): 30–55% of original retail with clean upholstery and sound frames.
- Flat-pack or fast-assembly: 10–35% of original, trending lower if visibly sagging or past 5 years.
Dining tables & chairs
- Solid wood, timeless profiles (oak, walnut, and maple): 40–65% of original; extendable designs and 6–8 seaters move faster.
- Veneer or MDF with wear: 15–35% of original; price to move if edges show swelling or chips.
Storage & case goods (dressers, sideboards, bookcases)
- Crafted hardwood and vintage mid-century: 50–80% of current retail equivalents; restored vintage can exceed original MSRP.
- Laminate/MDF basics: 20–40% of original if drawers run smoothly and surfaces are tidy.
Office seating & desks
- Ergonomic task chairs from contract brands (Steelcase, Herman Miller, Humanscale): 45–75% of original depending on upholstery and cylinder health. Corporate off-leases keep supply flowing, so condition matters.
- Consumer desks: 25–50% of original; cable management and minimal wear boost sell-through.
Outdoor furniture
- Powder-coated aluminum/teak sets from quality brands: 40–65% off original retail in spring-summer; seasonal timing is crucial.
- Resin wicker or rusted sets: 10–30% unless recently refurbished.
Brands and styles holding value
Marketplace data and trade coverage show consistent buyer pull toward:
- Design classics & “evergreen” silhouettes over trend-of-the-month styles.
- Mid-century, Scandinavian, and contemporary minimal for small-space living.
- Contract-grade office seating that blends ergonomics with durability.
If you’re pricing a piece from a known design house or a retail collab that earned press, start near the top of the band, then adjust for condition.
Market forces shaping 2025 resale
- Value hunting is mainstream. A sizable share of U.S. shoppers plan to buy secondhand to stretch budgets, and home goods are a key target category for savings.
- Macro prices moderated; expectations didn’t. As overall inflation eased into late 2024, shoppers became more price-discerning. Listings that look “too close” to new-retail stalls. Competitive, transparent pricing moves inventory.
- Sustainability is now a purchase filter. Reports continue to show environmental motives alongside savings, which helps vintage and high-quality woods and metals.
- Regional dynamics matter. Urban cores with frequent moves create steady supply and strong buyer pools for small-footprint, modular items. College towns and hybrid-work hubs show healthy turnover in desks and task chairs.
Data-backed pricing checklist
Use this quick audit before you list:
- Condition: steam clean textiles, tighten hardware, lubricate drawers.
- Proof & details: share original MSRP, dimensions, materials, year, and brand line.
- Photos: bright, full-frame shots from multiple angles plus close-ups of any blemishes.
- Delivery plan: offer curbside or white-glove options; flexible logistics raise conversion.
- Timing: list outdoor sets pre-spring, dorm and office furniture in late summer, and big living-room pieces ahead of holiday hosting.
What’s hot right now
- Quality wood dining and storage as buyers trade away from disposable pieces.
- Neutral sofas with performance fabrics that photograph cleanly for online listings.
- Ergonomic task chairs with documented model names and recent refreshes.
- Vintage mid-century case goods with honest patina rather than heavy refinishing.
What price to move
- Trend-locked “it” pieces that are oversupplied locally.
- Flaking veneers or swollen MDF where repairs are obvious.
- Heavily worn low-retail items that compete head-to-head with new sale prices.
FAQ
Are prices up or down vs last year?
New-furniture inflation cooled into late 2024, so buyers expect sharper discounts on used. Well-kept design pieces still hold value, but listings need realistic pricing to sell quickly.
Which marketplaces are best?
Local marketplaces excel for bulky items. Niche design platforms are strong for vintage and iconic brands. Recommerce platforms report persistent demand for home and furniture across 2024–2025.
What if I can’t verify a brand?
Lead with materials and construction: solid wood, joinery quality, cushion density, and hardware. Buyers reward substance even without a big label.
Bottom line
Secondhand furniture continues to be a smart choice for buyers and sellers in 2025, with value driven by quality, timing, and presentation. At Remoov, we make the process seamless by helping you sell what still has market value, donate what can support local charities, and recycle the rest responsibly. With one pickup, you can clear space, earn back cash, and contribute to a more sustainable furniture market.
