US Furniture Consumer Market Size
Last updated:
Source: FRED/BEA DFURRC1A027NBEA annual PCE for furniture, furnishings, and floor coverings. Values are converted from billion US dollars to million US dollars and to euro using annual averages from ECB EXR/M.USD.EUR.SP00.A. Nowcasts, where present, use complete-year US furniture retail turnover growth from the API monthly turnover dataset.
Source description: Annual US furniture consumer market size in million US dollars and million euro. Latest complete years are nowcast where BEA/FRED PCE lags but full-year US furniture retail turnover is available.
Table ID: retail/market-size/us-furniture-consumer-market-size
Key findings:
- The US furniture consumer market size reached 257.2 billion US dollars in 2025, marking an increase from 251.8 billion US dollars in the previous year.
- Read alongside US Furniture Retail Turnover and US Furniture Product Search Trend, turnover adds context to realised furniture spending conditions.
- The local-currency view shows consistent growth, while the euro view reflects currency translation differences.
Latest data:
| x_axis | value |
|---|---|
| 2015 | 152.5 |
| 2016 | 159.4 |
| 2017 | 165.8 |
| 2018 | 175.2 |
| 2019 | 181.1 |
| 2020 | 194 |
| 2021 | 235.4 |
| 2022 | 245.1 |
| 2023 | 246.8 |
| 2024 | 251.8 |
| 2025 | 257.2 |
This indicator tracks annual US furniture consumer market size from the household-spending side, using BEA/FRED personal consumption expenditure data for furniture, furnishings and floor coverings. It helps benchmark the scale of US furniture demand alongside furniture retail turnover, housing-market activity, consumer confidence and online product-search interest.
Market Context
US furniture demand is shaped by the housing cycle, mortgage affordability, household formation, replacement spending, remodeling activity and the health of discretionary consumer budgets. Because the source is personal consumption expenditure, this indicator captures buyer-side spending on furniture, furnishings and floor coverings rather than only sales booked by specialist furniture stores.
The default US dollar view is the clearest read on local nominal demand in the United States. The euro view is useful for comparing the US market with European benchmarks, but it also reflects USD/EUR exchange-rate translation, so it should be read alongside US furniture retail turnover, housing-market activity and online product-search interest.