How to price used furniture
Quick answer
Do three things.
- Find comps for your exact item.
- Pick a price range, not one number.
- Make pickup easy and clear.
Name the item clearly
Buyers pay more when the details are clear.
- Type: sofa, table, bed, dresser
- Size: width, depth, height in inches
- Material: solid wood, leather, fabric
- Brand: add a label photo if you have one
- Flaws: scratch, stain, wobble
Find local comps
Comps are items like yours that are for sale near you right now.
- Search brand + item type + size.
- Save 3 to 10 similar listings.
- Note condition and pickup details on each one.
Match brand and size first. Then filter by condition.
Set a fast, fair, or patient price
A range helps you sell faster than one fixed number.
| Goal | Price idea |
|---|---|
| Fast sale | Price below most comps. |
| Fair price | Price near the middle of comps. |
| Patient price | Price near the top comp, if the piece is nearly new. |
Adjust for condition
Condition is the biggest price driver after brand.
No stains. No scratches. Solid structure.
Price near the top comp.
Light wear. Minor marks. Still sturdy.
Price near the middle comp.
Visible wear. Minor repairs may be needed.
Price near the low comp.
Structural issues or heavy stains.
Price low or consider donating.
Adjust for brand and material
Solid materials and known brands hold their value longer.
- Solid wood, walnut, or oak: holds value well.
- Particle board or laminate: drops value faster.
- Genuine leather: holds value if clean and soft.
- Fabric: value depends on condition and cleanliness.
Adjust for pickup friction
Hard pickup lowers what buyers will pay. Easy pickup raises it.
- Stairs or a long carry: price lower.
- Tight parking or no truck access: price lower.
- Disassembled and ready to go: price higher.
- Ground floor with close parking: price higher.
Take photos that support the price
Good photos cut no-shows and build trust before pickup.
- Use bright natural light. Avoid flash.
- Show one flaw photo on purpose. Buyers respect honesty.
- Include dimensions in the listing or in the photo.
- Add pickup notes: stairs, parking needed, truck required.
Use the calculator
Not sure what your piece is worth? The free calculator gives you a fast range.
List on Asherfield
Once you have a price, create your listing. It takes a few minutes.
People also ask
- How much should I sell used furniture for?
- Start with comps for similar items. Then set a fair price range based on condition and pickup work.
- How do I find good comps?
- Search for the same brand, size, and condition. Save 3 to 10 listings to compare.
- Should I price high then drop?
- Yes if you have time. Drop the price once a week until you get serious replies.
- What makes used furniture hold value?
- Solid build, clean condition, clear photos, and an easy pickup plan.
- How do I price furniture for resale fast?
- Use five comps then choose a fast sale range or a fair range. Keep pickup simple.
- How do I determine fair market value of furniture?
- Check 5 to 10 local comps in the same condition. The middle price is close to fair market value.
Helpful resources
- Selling stuff online safely — FTC
- Fake check scams to avoid — FTC
- Furniture waste data — EPA
- Safe lifting guide — CDC/NIOSH