Where to sell custom furniture (7 places that work)

Custom furniture sells best when the channel matches your work. Use this to pick the right place, fast.

Pick your main selling lane first

This keeps you from doing everything at once. It also saves you time.

  • Local-first: best for big, heavy pieces.
  • Ship-friendly: best for small items and repeat parts.
  • Trade: best for designers, builders, and staging teams.
Simple rule: If it is hard to ship, sell it local-first. You will close faster.

7 places to sell custom furniture

1) Local marketplace listings

This is the easiest path for big pieces. Buyers already expect pickup or delivery.

  • Best for tables, desks, dressers, beds, and cabinets.
  • Great when you want local leads, not shipping drama.
  • Use strong photos and clear sizes.

Demo: browse active listings on Asherfield marketplace.

2) Instagram and short videos

Show the build. People buy the process.

  • Post “before, build, after.”
  • Pin your price range and lead time.
  • Send buyers to one clean listing link.

3) Facebook local groups

Great for quick local demand. Also good for custom requests.

  • Post finished work, not just sketches.
  • Set a minimum budget in the post.
  • Offer two pickup windows.

4) Craft fairs and maker markets

Best for small items. Also great for meeting repeat buyers.

  • Bring 1–2 “hero” pieces for attention.
  • Sell smaller items for quick cash.
  • Collect custom requests with photos.

5) Local boutiques and consignment

Good for decor and small furniture. Ask about terms up front.

  • Great for stools, benches, shelves, side tables.
  • Get the payout timing in writing.
  • Ask how damage is handled.

6) Interior designers, builders, and stagers

This is where larger budgets live. It is also repeat work.

  • Make a simple “trade” one-pager.
  • Share lead time, materials, and finish options.
  • Offer a clean quote process.

7) Your own simple landing page

Keep it basic. One page is enough to start.

  • Show 10 photos of best work.
  • List your price range and lead time.
  • Link to one place to buy or request a quote.
Infographic idea: “Where to sell custom furniture”
A one-page map of the 7 places above. Add: best for big pieces vs small pieces.

What to include in every custom listing

Clear info brings better buyers. It also cuts down on back-and-forth.

  • Size (width × depth × height).
  • Wood type and finish type.
  • Price or price range.
  • Lead time and pickup plan.
  • Delivery options (if any).
  • Care notes in one sentence.
Clarity wins: Put key terms near the claim they support. Do not hide them at the end.

A simple quote flow that stays sane

Custom work needs a clean process. You are not being “cold.” You are being clear.

  • Step 1: buyer shares photos and room size.
  • Step 2: you send a rough range and timeline.
  • Step 3: you confirm final specs and total price.
  • Step 4: schedule pickup or delivery window.

Want the step-by-step selling process? Link this post sideways to your guide: How to sell custom furniture.

Photos that sell custom work

Buyers pay more when they trust the build. Show proof.

  • Top surface close-up (grain and finish).
  • Corner close-up (joinery and edges).
  • Underside shot (sturdy build).
  • One photo that shows scale in a room.
  • Any flaws, shown clearly.

For wood-specific photo tips, link down to: Selling wood furniture.

Want buyers to find you without the noise?

Browse local listings to see price comps. Then sell your furniture when you’re ready.

Built for big pieces. Local-first. Private messages.

People also ask

Where can I sell custom furniture near me?
Start with local marketplace listings. Big pieces move faster with local pickup or delivery.
Is it better to sell custom furniture online or local?
For big pieces, local is often easier. For small items, shipping can work well.
How do I find buyers for custom furniture?
Show finished work, set a clear price range, and list where buyers already shop.
How should I price custom furniture?
Add materials, time, and a profit buffer. Then compare to local comps.
What should my listing say about lead time?
Say the honest timeline. Clear lead times reduce bad leads and refunds.

Next steps

  • Pick one lane: local-first, ship-friendly, or trade.
  • Post one strong listing with clear terms.
  • Repeat the one piece that sells best.