Norway Furniture Retail Market Size
Last updated:
Source: Statistics Norway StatBank annual SIC2007 47.59 turnover and monthly 47.59 value index; ECB NOK exchange rates.
Source description: Annual Norway furniture retail market size using Statistics Norway SIC2007 47.59 annual turnover, with monthly 47.59 movement for recent estimates.
Table ID: retail/market_size/europe_furniture_retail_turnover_yearly
Key findings:
- In 2025, Norway furniture retail turnover grew versus 2024, pointing to a firmer reported market-size signal.
- The 2025 level is near the upper end of the reported range, showing a comparatively large retail market.
- Use this turnover indicator with search and housing signals to separate realised spending from earlier demand indicators.
Latest data:
| x_axis | value |
|---|---|
| 2017 | 28780.2 |
| 2018 | 28847.1 |
| 2019 | 30202.9 |
| 2020 | 33071.8 |
| 2021 | 35976.6 |
| 2022 | 37951.6 |
| 2023 | 34750.1 |
| 2024 | 35232.1 |
| 2025 | 39129.7 |
Norway Furniture Retail Market Size tracks annual specialist furniture retail turnover in Norwegian kroner, with a euro view for cross-market comparison. It helps analysts and management teams read a high-income Nordic furniture market where housing activity, interest rates, import prices and NOK movements can quickly affect big-ticket home purchases.
Market Context
Norwegian furniture retail demand is closely tied to household balance sheets and the housing cycle. When mortgage costs, home moves or renovation plans change, the effect can show up quickly in specialised furniture stores because many purchases are discretionary and relatively high value.
The market is concentrated around Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim, Stavanger and other regional hubs, but sourcing is international. That makes NOK purchasing power and imported assortment important for both retailer margins and consumer pricing.
Use this indicator with Norway housing, imports, production and producer-price pages to separate domestic retail demand from manufacturing output and trade exposure. The local-currency view is best for Norwegian planning, while the euro view is useful for Nordic and European peer comparison.