
In May 2025, new residential furniture orders slipped by a
modest 1 % compared to May 2024 but rebounded sharply from
April, rising 11 %. Roughly half of survey participants reported
increases versus decreases year-over-year, according to Mark
Laferriere, assurance partner at Smith Leonard, publisher of the
monthly Furniture Insights report. Year-to-date figures show new
orders remain 3 % lower than a year ago.
Seasonally adjusted, June sales at furniture and home
furnishings outlets were up 4.5% from June 2024 but unchanged
from May. According to the July Furniture Insights, sales were
up 5.7% year-to-date on a non-adjusted basis. Shipments in May
were down 2 % compared to May 2024, remained flat versus April,
and are now down 1 % for the year-to-date. Despite the dip, 40 %
of survey respondents still reported shipment gains over the
previous year.
Compared to last year, new orders for household furniture have
decreased by 3% so far this year. Although 40% of survey
respondents indicated growth over the previous year, May
shipments were down 2% from 2024 estimates, according to
Laferriere. Shipments in May are down 1% so far this year
compared to 2024 estimates and flat compared to April. Backlogs
have eased 10 % from May 2024 but ticked up 2–3 % from April
2025. Laferriere noted these patterns align closely with the
trajectory of orders and shipments.
Similar to new furniture orders, May backlogs are higher than
they were the month before but lower than they were a year ago.
The backlogs are up 3% from April 2025 but down 10% from May
2024, “which appear materially in line with new order and
shipments trends,” he told reporters. Receivables levels
decreased 2% from May 2024 and 6% from April, “both materially
in line with related shipment trends, subject to normal
fluctuations in the timing of collections,” Laferriere added.
Receivables fell 6 % from April and are down 2 %
year-over-year—showing a steady, expected movement in line with
shipment trends, aside from normal collection timing
fluctuations. Looking at retail performance, seasonally adjusted
sales at furniture and home furnishings stores were unchanged
from May to June but have climbed 4.5 % compared to June 2024.
On a non-adjusted basis, year-to-date sales rose 5.7 %.
“This month we saw consumer confidence at least begin to
stabilize, and some positive trends with GDP, but housing
continues to bump along while the Fed again takes a wait-and-see
approach on inflation and rate cuts during its July meeting,”
Laferriere said. “Dealing with the ever-evolving tariff
landscape continues to be top of mind for suppliers and
retailers alike, but that picture is seemingly coming more and
more into focus with the latest round of tariff announcements,
though China remains the wild card,” he added. “After about six
months of uncertainty, we are hopeful this will provide
consumers with a return to some sense of normalcy and the
direction the industry needs to effectively operate and
capitalize on the many positive factors and opportunities that
remain in the market for the remainder of the year and beyond.”
Source: smith-leonard.com