When you buy secondhand you are not just saving money, you are saving the planet. Every used sofa, table, or chair you choose over a brand-new one keeps raw materials in the ground, emissions out of the air, and waste out of the landfill. But how do you actually measure the impact of shopping secondhand?
This guide walks you through the carbon math behind used furniture and helps you estimate how much of a difference your sustainable choices really make.
Why Carbon Savings Matter in Furniture Shopping
Furniture manufacturing has a surprisingly large carbon footprint. A 2021 report by the Environmental Protection Agency estimated that over 12 million tons of furniture and furnishings are discarded annually in the United States, most of which end up in landfills. The production of new furniture also consumes vast amounts of energy, water, and resources like wood, metal, and plastics, each with its own carbon cost.
Choosing used furniture interrupts this cycle. It reduces demand for new production and extends the life of existing materials, contributing to a circular economy where fewer emissions are generated at every stage.
The Carbon Footprint of New Furniture: What Goes Into It
To understand the carbon savings of secondhand furniture, it is necessary to understand what we are saving from. The carbon footprint of a new furniture item includes:
Raw Material Extraction: Cutting down trees, mining metal, and producing plastics all consume energy and emit greenhouse gases.
Manufacturing and Assembly: Furniture factories often rely on fossil fuels and produce significant emissions during production.
Packaging: Foam, plastic wrap, and cardboard add to the total emissions.
Transportation: From overseas shipping to last-mile delivery, furniture travels long distances before reaching your home.
Disposal: When furniture is discarded, it often ends up in landfills where it can release methane, especially if it contains wood or foam.
On average, a single new wooden dining chair emits about 16 kg of CO₂e during its production and transport. A new sofa can climb to 90–120 kg CO₂e depending on materials and country of origin.
How Buying Secondhand Reduces Emissions
When you buy a secondhand item, you bypass most of the emissions outlined above. The energy and emissions spent to make and transport the item were already “sunk” into the product years ago. You also prevent that item from ending up in a landfill, extending its life instead.
Here is what you typically avoid when buying secondhand:
Emissions from new raw material extraction
Emissions from manufacturing and production
Emissions from packaging and mass distribution
Landfill emissions such as methane and decomposition gases
Even if you need to arrange for local delivery or minor repairs, the total emissions of a secondhand piece are drastically lower than starting from scratch.
Sample Carbon Savings: Used vs New
Let us take a look at a few common furniture items and compare the carbon footprints of buying them new versus secondhand:
Furniture Item | Estimated CO₂e for New | Estimated CO₂e for Secondhand | Carbon Savings |
Dining Chair | 16 kg CO₂e | 2 kg CO₂e (local pickup) | 14 kg CO₂e |
Wooden Coffee Table | 45 kg CO₂e | 4 kg CO₂e (minor refinishing) | 41 kg CO₂e |
Leather Sofa | 120 kg CO₂e | 10 kg CO₂e (delivery or repair) | 110 kg CO₂e |
Bookshelf (MDF) | 30 kg CO₂e | 3 kg CO₂e | 27 kg CO₂e |
Multiply that by a whole room’s worth of furnishings, and you are looking at hundreds of kilograms of carbon emissions avoided.
How to Estimate Your Own Carbon Savings
Want to do your own sustainability math? Here is a quick method to estimate how much carbon you have saved:
1. Find the average carbon footprint of a new item
Use publicly available databases like Carbon Trust or product-specific life cycle assessment studies. If unavailable, general ranges include:
Chairs: 15–25 kg CO₂e
Tables: 40–70 kg CO₂e
Sofas: 90–130 kg CO₂e
Beds: 80–100 kg CO₂e
2. Estimate emissions for your secondhand purchase
This usually includes:
Local pickup or delivery: 1–5 kg CO₂e depending on distance
Refinishing, repainting, or repairs: 1–10 kg CO₂e
3. Subtract to find the savings
Carbon savings = Emissions from new item minus emissions from secondhand item
Example: If your secondhand sofa needed a small repair and local delivery, the footprint might be around 10 kg CO₂e, versus 100 kg CO₂e for a new sofa. You saved 90 percent of the emissions.
Beyond Carbon: Other Environmental Benefits
Carbon is not the only thing you are reducing when buying secondhand. Your purchase also helps:
Reduce landfill waste
Conserve water and energy used in production
Avoid deforestation from wood furniture
Minimize plastic and chemical waste in packaging
By shopping used, you are participating in a circular model of consumption that prioritizes reuse, repair, and responsibility over endless production.
Sustainable Furniture Shopping Tips
To make the most of your secondhand impact, keep these tips in mind:
Buy Local When Possible: Buying locally reduces emissions from long-distance transport and supports your local economy.
Inspect Before You Buy: Look for solid construction, durable materials, and easy-to-clean surfaces. A quality used item will last just as long or longer than something new.
Invest in Light Repairs: Repainting, reupholstering, or refinishing often takes less than a day and saves furniture from the landfill.
Choose Timeless Designs: Classic styles tend to hold up better over time and blend easily with new décor.
Use Platforms With Verified Condition Grades: Reperch and similar secondhand platforms often grade furniture condition to help you shop with confidence.
Final Thoughts: Every Purchase Counts
Secondhand shopping is not just a budget-friendly lifestyle. It is one of the most accessible ways individuals can make a meaningful environmental difference. If every household in the United States replaced just one major piece of new furniture per year with a used item, we could prevent millions of tons of carbon emissions annually.
At Reperch, we are proud to be part of that shift, helping you furnish your home beautifully while protecting the planet. The next time you browse for a new addition to your space, consider the carbon math. You may be surprised just how powerful that used chair, sofa, or table can be.