Europe Furniture Imports by Year
Last updated:
Source: Eurostat Comext, HMRC UK Trade Info and UN Comtrade furniture trade data for HS 9401, 9402 and 9403, normalized in the Furnilytics European trade table.
Source description: Annual Europe furniture imports are aggregated from monthly reporter-partner trade rows for the selected European coverage. The total view sums all non-aggregate partner-country rows reported by the included countries. The extra-Europe view excludes partner countries inside the same European coverage so it focuses on imports sourced from outside the selected region.
Table ID: industry/trade/europe_furniture_imports_hs4
Key findings:
- Europe's furniture import market ended 2025 at 80 billion euro, with extra-Europe suppliers accounting for 23.4 billion euro of that value.
- The latest year shows renewed growth: total imports increased by 2.8 billion euro, while extra-Europe imports increased by 1.1 billion euro versus 2024.
- Compared with 2018, the total import base is 19.1 billion euro higher, while extra-Europe sourcing is 8 billion euro higher.
- Extra-Europe suppliers represent about 29.3% of the latest import value, 4 percentage points above the 2018 share and 0.4 percentage points above 2024.
- The import cycle has not fully returned to its 2022 high of 83 billion euro, but it is well above the 2020 trough.
- The extra-Europe series peaked in 2022, which helps separate global sourcing exposure from the broader total-import footprint inside the European coverage.
Latest data:
| x_axis | value |
|---|---|
| 2018 | 60.93 |
| 2019 | 64.03 |
| 2020 | 60.87 |
| 2021 | 74.23 |
| 2022 | 83.05 |
| 2023 | 75.45 |
| 2024 | 77.21 |
| 2025 | 79.99 |
Europe furniture imports by year tracks the value of furniture entering the selected European market coverage. The indicator covers HS 9401 seating, HS 9402 medical and specialist furniture, and HS 9403 other furniture and parts. It is designed to show both the full import footprint and the part sourced from outside Europe, giving a clearer view of how regional demand depends on external suppliers.
Market Context
Furniture imports matter because European retailers, contract suppliers, distributors and manufacturers rely on both nearby European supply chains and long-distance sourcing markets. A total import view shows the full trade flow into the covered markets, including regional cross-border movement. The extra-Europe view separates the part supplied from outside the same country coverage, which is more relevant for global sourcing exposure, freight sensitivity, currency effects and non-European supplier participation.
For supplier-market detail behind the annual totals, use the Europe Furniture Imports by Country indicator to see which partner countries account for the import base.
Total View
The total view includes all reported furniture imports into the selected European coverage, including imports from other European countries. Use it to read the full import footprint of the covered markets.
Trend Overview
Total Europe furniture imports reached 79.99 billion euro in 2025, putting the market 2.78 billion euro higher than the previous year. The latest reading confirms that import demand has continued to recover from the 2023 setback, but it is still 3.06 billion euro below the 2022 peak of 83.05 billion euro. Across the full series, the import base is 31.3% higher than in 2018, which points to a larger European import footprint even after the post-2022 correction.
Extra-Europe View
The extra-Europe view excludes partner countries inside the same European coverage. It isolates imports sourced from outside Europe, which makes it the cleaner view of global supplier reliance.
Trend Overview
Extra-Europe furniture imports rose to 23.4 billion euro in 2025, after 22.3 billion euro in 2024. Extra-European suppliers represented 29.3% of total imports in 2025, 0.4 percentage points higher than a year earlier. The series remains below the 2022 high of 25.49 billion euro, but it is 51.9% above 2018, showing that non-European sourcing is structurally larger than at the start of the period. This view is useful for separating global supplier exposure from intra-European trade flows.