• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer
The Healthy Home Economist

The Healthy Home Economist

embrace your right to a lifetime of health

Get Plus
  • Home
  • About
  • My Books
  • Shopping List
  • Archives
  • Log in
  • Get Plus
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Get Plus
  • Log in
  • Home
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Archives
  • My Books
  • Shopping List
  • Recipes
  • Healthy Living
  • Natural Remedies
  • Green Living
  • Videos
  • Natural Remedies
  • Health
  • Green Living
  • Recipes
  • Videos
  • Subscribe
Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Green Living / Organic Furniture. Going Green and Nontoxic on a Budget

Organic Furniture. Going Green and Nontoxic on a Budget

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Searching for Safe Furniture
  • Toxins in Conventional Furniture
  • Safe Bed is the MOST Important Purchase
  • Organic Furniture: Is There Really Such a Thing?
  • Selection and Affordability
  • What About Leather?
  • How to Ensure Your Furniture is Safe+−
    • Test Foam for Fire Retardants
    • Stop the Outgassing of Formaldehyde
  • How to Source Nontoxic Furnishings

How to identify and source safe, nontoxic, green, and organic furniture for your home and office that is budget conscious and also practical for households with children.

green organic living room furniture purchased on a budget

I’ve written several articles in the past about the importance of sourcing nontoxic mattresses and pillows to facilitate deep, sound sleep habits. But what about furniture?

Most of us sit quite a bit and even sleep on the couch occasionally (you know, zonking out during a boring Netflix selection).

Considering the purchase of organic furniture when budgeting for home furnishing is nearly as important a decision.

Searching for Safe Furniture

One person grappling with this decision recently emailed me about it to ask for input. Kyra writes:

I love your blog! I have a suggestion for one…searched your site and don’t think you ever talked about it before– I am considering updating my living room couches, but I’ve read that most furniture is sprayed with all kinds of chemicals. Since our family room is where my family spends a ton of time (playing, napping, snuggling, snacking), I want to buy something non-toxic. Is that possible? Where and how do I find furniture that isn’t full of chemicals, fire retardants and formaldehyde?

Can you give us some tips on several brands/companies or stores and what to look for, please? What did you purchase for your family? Your article about mattresses was great so I was hoping you have helpful tips for furniture too (even though, if I remember correctly, you only recommended one particular brand). Thank you for providing us with such valuable information to keep us healthy!

This is a great question. Unfortunately, I have not discovered clear-cut answers especially if you are furnishing your home on a budget.

My husband and I have never placed much importance on the need for fancy decorating in our home (primarily because my husband really doesn’t care one way or another, and I am an avowed minimalist in that department). However, we have always managed to procure quality, nontoxic furniture despite spending very little.

Below is the strategy we have employed during our 25 years together. It has served to keep the furniture we buy affordable, green, and as organic as possible.

Perhaps it might help give you some ideas too. First, let’s go over what’s available on the market currently and how it is or isn’t an option for those seeking a chemical-free living environment.

Toxins in Conventional Furniture

Before we talk about solutions, let’s identify the problem with conventional furniture today. This includes dormitory furniture used in most colleges and boarding schools. The health issues are primarily three-fold:

  • The foam in the cushions is made of petroleum-based polyurethane, a highly flammable product. To rectify this, toxic, cancer-causing flame retardants are added. This synthetic foam in the cushions breaks down over time. The result is dust containing fire retardant chemicals polluting the indoor air which everyone breaths. These chemicals have become ubiquitous in the environment. They are found in wildlife tissue samples (both land and sea), breastmilk and other human body fluids. (1)
  • The wood used in typical furniture products is not solid. It is comprised of particleboard. Particleboard manufacture involves the use of formaldehyde. This chemical has been identified as a known carcinogen by the National Toxicology Program. (2)
  • The half-life of formaldehyde outgassing from particleboard is about one year. Heat makes it outgas faster. However, long term studies indicate that significant outgassing continues for at least 5 years and possibly longer. (3)
  • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from adhesives, dyes, and/or Scotchgard, which carries the unique risk of perfluorochemicals. The EPA says that these VOCs pollute indoor air by outgassing. (4)

Safe Bed is the MOST Important Purchase

For a health-conscious consumer seeking to furnish the home environment with nontoxic items, conventional furniture is quite simply a non-starter. Don’t forget – this includes the mattress you sleep on all night long!

Fortunately, there are nontoxic mattresses on the market that are very affordable and last as long or longer than conventional toxic ones (find healthy mattress brands I’ve vetted here).

Organic Furniture: Is There Really Such a Thing?

While finding a nontoxic mattress is getting easier and affordable today, the same cannot be said for organic furniture!

A few brands boast organic cotton upholstery, but watch out for the materials underneath! There is a lot of greenwashing going on in the furniture industry. A savvy consumer needs to be on high alert so as not to get scammed by clever marketing.

For example, the mainstream furniture manufacturers Pottery Barn and Ikea have a line of eco-friendly furniture which is clearly a step up from conventional toxic furniture of the Rooms-to-Go variety. This is a positive trend for sure!

However, I personally would not buy anything in these lines. Why? While the furniture is fire retardant-free and made of sustainably produced materials and perhaps even organic cotton, it is still a toxic choice from a health perspective.

For example, the recycled, FSC-certified wood used in the Pottery Barn line still has the potential to outgas formaldehyde and other chemicals since it can be made from all or a mix of post-consumer waste and VOC containing adhesives and upholstery dyes.

A more intimate example of this consumer trap is recycled toilet paper. While environmentally friendly, this is a toxic choice for the consumer.

In other words, an environmentally friendly, green product is not necessarily a nontoxic and healthy choice for your family!

Selection and Affordability

Let’s say you’ve managed to find organic furniture that delivers what is claimed. There are a few brands out there that are flame-retardant-free, fully recyclable, and use solid wood frames, certified organic textiles, and water-based adhesives.

This furniture brand is a good option to consider.

Unfortunately, an option like this is more expensive than conventional choices.

With conventional furniture a sketchy choice and organic furniture expensive, what is a health-conscious consumer to do? Let’s dig deeper.

What About Leather?

Some of you may have considered leather or faux leather furniture as an option to reduce toxins.

First off, let’s scratch faux leather off the list right away. Faux leather is made from a fabric base. This base is chemically treated with wax, VOC emitting dye, or polyurethane to achieve the desired color and texture. No thanks.

Real leather undergoes a tanning process that involves many carcinogenic chemicals and solvents that would make any environmentalist cringe. The process is so toxic to both the environment and the workers, in fact, that the EPA and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) have closed most USA tanneries. (5)

At one time (believe it or not), Boston was a world leader in the production of leather goods, but so many pollutants were dumped into rivers and streams that the dirty water runoff kicked off an environmental backlash from consumers.

As for the interior components of a leather couch, there would be little difference from upholstered conventional furniture.

Fire retardant foam and cheap, formaldehyde emitting particleboard are favored over a safer solid hardwood frame. Watch out for “engineered hardwood” too which uses plywood construction.

All plywood contains formaldehyde glues which outgas over time.

Some leather furniture makers use hypo-allergenic foams and true hardwood frames, but the leather tanning process is still a thorny issue for those that are chemically sensitive.

How to Ensure Your Furniture is Safe

If all of this information has you worried about furniture that was purchased before you started greening your lifestyle and improving your diet, take heart. There are some things you can do now to make sure your existing furniture is safe for your family.

Test Foam for Fire Retardants

Duke University’s Superfund Research Center is assisting consumers by offering foam testing services. You simply send in a small sample of the foam from your sofas, couches, or chairs.

The research team is testing foams to examine how badly fire retardant chemicals continue to off-gas over time. (6)

Stop the Outgassing of Formaldehyde

Another option is to purchase Safecoat Safe Seal.

This unique product is applied to particleboard to block the off-gassing of formaldehyde from processed wood products such as plywood, particleboard, and pressed wood.

It is especially practical to use on tables and the frames of sofas, couches, and chairs that are not composed of solid wood.

How to Source Nontoxic Furnishings

If at this point you feel discouraged or your head is spinning, take a deep breath. You can do what my husband and I have done for 25 years to keep things simple, safe, and affordable.

Buy. Used. Furniture.

Back when we bought our house in 1993, nontoxic furniture items didn’t exist and even if they did, we couldn’t afford them. So we developed a habit of scouring estate sales, consignment and antique shops, and even garage sales for quality furniture that was made with solid wood and/or old enough (5+ years) where any outgassing issues were long gone.

Not only does this strategy ensure a safe living environment, but it also saves a ton of money and is kind of a fun hobby too.

Probably the best example of this approach is the solid oak dining table we have that I am typing at right now. We got it for a song and have never had to worry that we were breathing formaldehyde fumes with every meal we ate there as a family.

What strategies have you employed over the years to source nontoxic, organic furniture?

nontoxic sustainable inexpensive chair and couch

References

(1) How Dangerous is Your Couch?

(2) Report on the Carcinogenicity of Formaldehyde

(3) Long-Term Formaldehyde Emissions from Medium-Density Fiberboard in a Full-Scale Experimental Room: Emission Characteristics and the Effects of Temperature and Humidity

(4) Coming Clean. Did 3M and DuPont ignore evidence of health risks?

(5) Chicago’s Last Tannery

(6) Duke University. What’s in My Foam?

FacebookPinEmailPrint
Category: Green Living
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

You May Also Like

staying safe from 5G

5G Coming to Town? Strategies to Consider for Staying Safe

natural home weed control

Natural Weed Control for Landscaping and Garden (+ Video)

package of toxic fluorescent track lights

PCBs in Fluorescent Lights. Brain Damaged Teachers Win Massive Lawsuit Against Monsanto-Bayer

Chemical Sensitivity stores to avoid

Chemical Sensitivity? 5 Places to Avoid Shopping

heavy metal free Vitaclay slow cookers on granite table

Are Vitaclay Slow Cookers Contaminated with Lead?

upcycled banana on a table

Why You Should Avoid “Upcycled” Foods

Is Your Home Making You Sick?

Get a free chapter of my book Living Green in an Artificial World + my newsletter and learn how to start creating a living environment that supports and enhances health!

We send no more than one email per week. You will never be spammed or your email sold, ever.
Loading

Reader Interactions

Comments (97)

  1. Karen

    Oct 27, 2016 at 12:41 pm

    Hi Celeste (and others who suffer from multiple chemical sensitivity) – I suffered for DECADES with chemical sensitivity due to a toxic mold exposure, until I took a program called DNRS – it saved my life. I am renovating a home now, and am choosing all nontoxic materials, but it is so nice to be able to go to other’s homes again, without having to live in avoidance, due to extreme sensitivities. I hope you are able to turn it around with DNRS like I did! Sarah, I am grateful to you for all of your knowledge, research, and passion! Sending love to you and your family!

    Reply
  2. Pru

    Oct 27, 2016 at 12:14 am

    Hi Sarah, fabulous article. We have just purchased new wool carpet which is for bedrooms, however it has just occurred to me that I do not know what is in the underlay. Do you know much about what they put in carpet underlay? I am guessing it is not nice. Also a suggestion for new couches when we retire our current couch we are getting an organic futon with a solid wood frame made using traditional joinery not glues.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Oct 27, 2016 at 10:22 am

      Adhesives and foam on the pad underneath a wool carpet can be problematic. There ARE some wool carpet companies that use a nontoxic pad and adhesives. Some don’t, however. Call your manufacturer to check.

  3. Terri

    Oct 26, 2016 at 2:21 pm

    Thanks for the Furnature link. Their fabric selection seems to be improving, and I hope to purchase fabric and batting to make new cushions for my couch.

    Reply
  4. BeverlyAnn Chyatte

    Oct 26, 2016 at 2:16 pm

    FOR THOSE WHO LOVE MODERN DESIGN: We bought gently used leather living room furniture off craigslist. We bought the sofa and 2 loveseat (the brand is from Norway called Ekornes/Stressless) which would retail for $25,000. Yes, twenty five thousand if new. We paid $3,000 for it and plan to spend $6,000 to reupholster it when the leather becomes an embarrassment. It is a classic Swedish modern design that will be and has been popular for decades. I recommend buying used high end “classic” always in style furniture then having it reupholstered in non toxic fabric.

    Reply
  5. Lise

    Oct 25, 2016 at 3:18 pm

    Another thing to consider is to just go furniture free. I know this isn’t for everyone but for those who have never considered it, it might be a light-bulb moment. nutritiousmovement.com/furniture-free-ahs13/

    Reply
  6. Celeste

    Oct 25, 2016 at 9:38 am

    Thank you for the article! My husband and I are downsizing, selling our home and moving. We have gotten rid of most of our furniture except for the old pieces of real wood and antiques that have been in the family for decades. Some of the furniture needs to be refinished due to scratches, chips etc . I have CIRS, (mold and biotoxin issues) Lyme, MCS etc and am recovering. How can we refinish and clean these items with low VOC’s and environmental friendly compounds that will not off gas? I need to be very careful about any used furniture that may have been contaminated and contain mildew or mold etc….. your suggestions and help with this would be greatly appreciated! Thank you!

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Oct 25, 2016 at 3:44 pm

      It might be best for you to stick with real wood pieces given your sensitivities. Naturally tanned leather pieces used in an office environment that is air conditioned 24/7 and rarely used (boardroom furniture … lobby furniture) is a great bet for quality used furniture that has totally outgassed from just sitting there for years and still a great price.

  7. Reader

    Oct 25, 2016 at 9:08 am

    Wow!! Love your articles. Kudos for coming up with wonderful content every day. Love your approach to the problems we face big and small in so many areas of the home economy ;). THANK YOU!!

    Reply
  8. Kelly the Kitchen Kop

    Oct 24, 2016 at 10:14 pm

    Hi Sarah!

    I love the idea of buying used furniture for things like tables, desks, etc., but what about items that are made of fabric like couches or chairs? For something like that, what’s the best way to clean it? We need a new couch, but I’m NOT looking forward to “that smell” and would like to find something nice that’s used. Thanks for the ideas!

    Kel

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Oct 25, 2016 at 7:35 am

      Hi Kel, yes “that smell” is a big issue when buying used! I have a super sensitive nose so we got around that by buying leather couches used (really high quality ones that are naturally tanned … don’t buy ones that have colors) or upholstered furniture that was used in an office building that was rarely used and had no scent. Hope that helps!

  9. Wynette

    Oct 24, 2016 at 10:06 pm

    I have been following your blog for about 4 years now and have gained so much from you! But this post is fabulous! You have gone up in my estimation by leaps and bounds! I love it! Keep up the great work!
    Much love!

    Reply
  10. Tina Paul

    Oct 24, 2016 at 2:05 pm

    I am so glad to see this article as this has been a topic that I have been seriously interested in. My main question is what is your thought on used couches, as wouldn’t the synthetic fibers continue to break down over time and produce this toxic dust in my home? Also, what about dust mites being a problem in used couches/chairs. We don’t even have a couch right now as I have been trying to figure out what to do.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Oct 25, 2016 at 7:26 am

      For used couches, we buy naturally tanned leather which is super expensive new but reasonable used. The toxic dust from upholstered couches comes from the foam and particleboard frame which would be finished outgassing after about 5 years. I’ve found that used office furniture is best for upholstered items as they are barely used. Dust mites are a whole different issue and not a health problem unless you have an allergy to them. By the way, you can recover from a dust mite allergy. My husband used to be allergic to both types (yes, there is more than one!) and he has no issues with them anymore since going on a (fully) traditional diet.

Newer Comments »

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Sidebar

Mother Nature’s Medicine Cabinet

5 Secrets to a Strong Immune System

Loading

The Healthy Home Economist

Since 2002, Sarah has been a Health and Nutrition Educator dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. Read More

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Check Out My Books

Mother Nature’s Medicine Cabinet

5 Secrets to a Strong Immune System

Loading

Contact the Healthy Home Economist. The information on this website has not been evaluated by the FDA and is not intended to diagnose, treat, prevent, or cure any disease. By accessing or using this website, you agree to abide by the Terms of Service, Full Disclaimer, Privacy Policy, Affiliate Disclosure, and Comment Policy.

Copyright © 2009–2025 · The Healthy Home Economist · All Rights Reserved · Powered by BizBudding Inc.