How Much Does It Cost to Furnish an Apartment in Austin

Furnishing a one bedroom apartment in Austin costs $3,500-$8,000 for most renters, depending on whether you buy new, used, or mix both. Budget-conscious renters using Austin’s secondhand markets (IKEA Round Rock returns, Habitat ReStore, estate sales) can furnish for $2,000-$3,500. Premium furnishing with quality pieces runs $10,000-$15,000+.


What Austin Renters Spend on Furniture (Not What Websites Claim)

Here’s the problem with most “apartment furnishing cost” articles online: they’re written by staff writers in New York or Los Angeles who’ve never helped someone furnish a 650-square-foot one-bedroom in South Austin. They quote national averages—$4,500 to $6,000—that assume you’re walking into Pottery Barn with a checkbook. That’s not how it works for most people I help.

I spend my days finding apartments for Austin renters. That means I hear what happens after the lease gets signed. The furniture question comes up constantly. Relocators stare at an empty living room while the moving truck pulls away. First-time renters google “how much to furnish apartment” and find ranges so wide ($3,000 to $30,000) they’re useless.

This guide breaks down what Austin renters spend—room by room, with prices you can verify at local stores this week. I’ll share a framework I use with clients: matching your furniture budget to what you’re paying in rent. It keeps people from blowing their entire move-in savings on a couch they can’t afford. And because Austin has one of the best secondhand markets in Texas (thank the 50,000 UT students who turn over apartments every May), I’ll show you where to find quality pieces at 50-70% off retail.

You’ll walk away with a realistic budget, a shopping strategy, and a list of Austin stores by price point. No Pinterest fantasy boards. Just practical numbers.


Austin Apartment Furnishing Costs: Quick Reference Table

Short on time? Here’s the quick answer. These ranges reflect what Austin renters typically spend in early 2026—a mix of new purchases, secondhand finds, and the occasional IKEA run.

Apartment SizeBudget TierMid-Range TierComfortable Tier
Studio$1,500–$2,500$2,500–$4,000$4,000–$7,000
1-Bedroom$2,500–$4,000$4,000–$7,000$7,000–$12,000
2-Bedroom$4,000–$6,500$6,500–$10,000$10,000–$18,000
3-Bedroom$6,000–$9,000$9,000–$15,000$15,000–$25,000+

Prices verified January 2026. Furniture only—delivery, assembly, and tax add another 10-20%.

What these tiers mean:

  • Budget: Mostly secondhand and IKEA. Functional basics. Minimal decor.
  • Mid-Range: Mix of new and used. Better quality on high-use items like your sofa and mattress. Some style investment.
  • Comfortable: Mostly new from quality brands. Complete room setups including decor and accent pieces.

The Austin advantage: These numbers run 15-25% lower than national averages. Austin’s secondhand market is unusually strong—between UT Austin’s 50,000+ student turnover every May and August, a thriving estate sale scene, and two Habitat ReStore locations, you’ve got options that renters in smaller markets don’t have.


Match Your Furniture Budget to What You’re Paying in Rent

Here’s something most furniture guides ignore: tie your furniture budget to your rent.

The logic is simple. If you’re already stretching to afford $2,400/month in South Congress, dropping $8,000 on furniture the same month you’re paying first month’s rent, deposit, and move-in fees? That’s a recipe for financial stress. But if you’re paying $1,200/month in Pflugerville with stable income, you’ve got more flexibility. Buying quality pieces now might save you money down the road.

This isn’t a rule. It’s a framework. Adjust based on your savings, how long you plan to stay, and whether you already own anything.

The Rent-to-Furniture Framework

If your Austin rent is under $1,400/month:

  • Suggested furniture budget: $1,500–$2,500
  • Approach: Lean heavily on secondhand. Hit Habitat ReStore, Facebook Marketplace, and IKEA’s As-Is section. Prioritize the mattress and one good seating option. Everything else can wait.
  • Why this works: You’re watching your budget for a reason. Furniture is replaceable. Getting stuck with a lease you can’t afford isn’t.

If your Austin rent is $1,400–$2,000/month:

  • Suggested furniture budget: $2,500–$5,000
  • Approach: Mix new and used strategically. Buy your mattress and sofa new (or lightly used from a source you trust). Hunt secondhand for dining tables, dressers, accent pieces.
  • Why this works: This is median Austin renter territory. You’ve got room to invest in comfort without overextending.

If your Austin rent is $2,000–$2,800/month:

  • Suggested furniture budget: $5,000–$10,000
  • Approach: Buy quality where it counts. A well-made sofa lasts 10-15 years. A cheap one falls apart in 3. You can still score deals on secondhand items, but you’re not depending on them.
  • Why this works: At this rent level, you’re probably in a nicer unit. Furniture that matches the space makes sense.

If your Austin rent is $2,800+/month:

  • Suggested furniture budget: $10,000+
  • Approach: Invest in pieces you’ll keep long-term. Consider a furniture consultant or interior designer for layout help. This is “buy once, buy well” territory.
  • Why this works: You’re in luxury or premium housing. Quality pieces protect your investment in the space.

Why this matters

I’ve watched this mistake happen over and over: someone signs a lease at the top of their budget, then panic-furnishes with credit cards because the apartment feels empty. Three months later, they’re stressed about rent and the furniture payments.

The framework isn’t about being cheap. It’s about being strategic. Furniture that fits your financial situation serves you better than furniture that looks impressive but strains your budget every month.


What Each Room Costs to Furnish in Austin

Let’s break this down room by room. I’ll give you the essentials, the optional items worth considering, and the stuff you can skip—at least for now.

Quick reality check before we start: The living room is where most people overspend. The bedroom is where people underspend on the wrong things. The dining area? That’s where people buy furniture they never use.

Keep that in mind.

Living Room Furniture Costs: $1,800–$5,500

The living room eats the biggest chunk of your budget—usually 35-40% of the total. It’s also where guests spend time, so there’s pressure to make it look presentable.

Essential items:

ItemBudget RangeMid-RangeQuality Investment
Sofa$400–$700$800–$1,500$1,500–$3,000
Coffee table$50–$150$150–$400$400–$800
TV stand/media console$75–$200$200–$500$500–$1,000
Floor/table lamps (2)$40–$100$100–$250$250–$500
Area rug (5×8 minimum)$80–$200$200–$500$500–$1,200

Total essentials: $645–$1,350 (budget) to $3,150–$6,500 (quality)

Optional but worthwhile:

  • Accent chair: $150–$800. Worth it if you have guests regularly or want a dedicated reading spot.
  • Side tables: $30–$200 each. Functional, but a stack of books works in a pinch.
  • Bookshelf: $50–$400. Only if you have books. Otherwise, skip it.

Skip for now:

  • Ottoman/pouf (nice-to-have, not essential)
  • Decorative throw blankets (layer these in later)
  • Accent pillows beyond basics (IKEA sells $5 options if you need something)

The sofa question everyone asks: “Can I buy a used sofa?”

Honest answer: it depends. A leather or faux-leather sofa from a smoke-free, pet-free home? Probably fine. A fabric sofa from some stranger on Facebook Marketplace? That’s where you risk bedbugs, pet allergens, and odors that won’t show up until the thing’s sitting in your apartment.

The EPA warns about bringing bedbugs home through used furniture—upholstered items are high-risk because pests hide in seams, cushions, and frames where you can’t see them. If you go used, inspect carefully, ask questions, and stick to sources you can verify. Estate sales are generally safer than random Marketplace listings because you see the home environment.

For budget buyers, IKEA’s FRIHETEN sleeper sofa ($549) remains the sweet spot for Austin renters. Functional, replaceable, and available for pickup in Round Rock without a delivery fee.

Austin sourcing tip: Room Service Vintage on North Loop has rotating inventory of quality secondhand sofas in the $300–$700 range. They’re picky about what they accept, which means better quality control than your typical thrift store.


Bedroom Furnishing Costs: $1,200–$3,500

Your bedroom is simpler than the living room. But it’s got one item where cutting corners is a real mistake: the mattress.

Essential items:

ItemBudget RangeMid-RangeQuality Investment
Mattress (Queen)$300–$600$600–$1,200$1,200–$2,500
Bed frame$100–$250$250–$600$600–$1,500
Nightstand(s)$30–$100$100–$300$300–$600
Dresser$150–$400$400–$800$800–$1,500
Bedding set (sheets, pillows, comforter)$75–$150$150–$350$350–$700

Total essentials: $655–$1,500 (budget) to $3,250–$6,800 (quality)

The mattress rule: Buy new. Always.

I don’t care how good a deal someone offers on a used mattress. Don’t do it.

Here’s why: mattresses harbor dust mites, dead skin cells, sweat, and potentially bedbugs in ways you can’t see or clean. The Sleep Foundation recommends replacing mattresses every 6-10 years for hygiene and support—buying someone else’s older mattress means starting at the end of its useful life. The CDC warns against acquiring used mattresses and upholstered furniture due to pest risks that aren’t visible during inspection.

Budget tight? Look at mattress-in-a-box brands like Nectar, Zinus, or Lucid in the $300-$500 range. They’re not luxury. But they’re new, they’re clean, and they come with trial periods.

Everything else? Buy used without guilt.

Bed frames, nightstands, dressers—all excellent secondhand purchases. Solid wood dressers from estate sales often outperform new particleboard options that cost three times as much. Facebook Marketplace in Austin floods with barely-used bed frames from people upgrading or moving. I regularly see IKEA MALM frames for $50-75 that retail for $200+.

Austin sourcing tip: Blue Velvet on North Loop carries mid-century modern bedroom pieces—dressers, nightstands—in the $150-$400 range. Want that West Elm aesthetic without the West Elm price? Start there.


Dining Area Costs: $400–$1,500 (Or Maybe $0)

Worth asking before you buy anything here: do you need a dining table?

In a 650-square-foot one-bedroom—pretty common in Austin—a dining table often becomes a dumping ground for mail rather than somewhere you eat. If you work from home, that square footage might serve you better as a dedicated desk space.

If you do want dining furniture:

ItemBudget RangeMid-RangeQuality Investment
Table (seats 4)$100–$250$250–$600$600–$1,200
Chairs (set of 4)$80–$200$200–$500$500–$1,000

Total: $180–$450 (budget) to $1,100–$2,200 (quality)

Alternatives that work:

  • Bar cart + two stools: If your kitchen has counter space, skip the table entirely. Total: $100–$300.
  • Small drop-leaf table: Folds flat against the wall when not in use. IKEA’s NORDEN ($179) is popular for good reason.
  • Coffee table dining: Not elegant, but plenty of Austin renters eat on the couch and save the floor space.

Austin sourcing tip: Estate sales are goldmines for solid wood dining tables. Something that costs $800+ new at Crate & Barrel often goes for $150–$300 at an estate sale. The quality is frequently better—older furniture used real hardwood, not veneered particleboard.


Home Office Setup Costs: $300–$1,200

The home office went from “nice-to-have” to essential around 2020. It hasn’t gone back. Even if you work in an office, you probably need a desk for bills, taxes, and the occasional work-from-home day.

Essential items:

ItemBudget RangeMid-RangeQuality Investment
Desk$75–$200$200–$500$500–$1,200
Desk chair$100–$250$250–$500$500–$1,000+
Desk lamp$20–$50$50–$150$150–$300

Total: $195–$500 (budget) to $1,150–$2,500 (quality)

The desk chair rule: Don’t cheap out here.

This is the one place where I push back on “budget is fine.” A $75 Amazon chair will destroy your back within six months of regular use. Research in ergonomics journals confirms that proper lumbar support significantly improves posture and reduces musculoskeletal discomfort. Treating chronic back pain costs far more than buying a decent chair upfront.

You don’t need a $1,500 Herman Miller. But the $200–$400 range gets you real lumbar support, adjustable armrests, and a seat that won’t bottom out in a year. Brands like HON, Autonomous, and Secretlab (gaming chairs with real ergonomics) hit this sweet spot.

Austin sourcing tip: Blue Velvet and Side Kitsch both carry vintage desks—solid wood, often mid-century designs—for $150–$400. Pair a $200 vintage desk with a quality new chair and you’ve got a home office that looks intentional, not like a college dorm room.


Kitchen and Bathroom Basics: $200–$600

Most Austin apartments come with refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, and microwave. You’re not buying appliances. But you are buying everything you need to actually use those appliances—and this category adds up faster than people expect.

Kitchen essentials:

ItemBudget RangeMid-Range
Cookware set (pots, pans)$50–$100$100–$300
Utensils, spatulas, etc.$20–$50$50–$100
Knife set$30–$60$60–$150
Dishes/bowls (service for 4)$25–$60$60–$150
Glasses/mugs$15–$40$40–$80
Small appliances (coffee maker, toaster)$40–$100$100–$200

Kitchen total: $180–$410 (budget) to $410–$980 (mid-range)

Bathroom essentials:

ItemBudget RangeMid-Range
Towel set$25–$50$50–$120
Bath mat$15–$30$30–$60
Shower curtain + liner$15–$40$40–$80
Wastebasket$10–$20$20–$40
Toiletries organizer$10–$25$25–$50

Bathroom total: $75–$165 (budget) to $165–$350 (mid-range)

The Target trap: You’ll go to Target for “just a few things” and leave $200 poorer. This happens to everyone. Budget for it. Seriously—add $100–$200 to your mental estimate for “random Target runs” and you’ll end up closer to reality than if you itemize everything in advance.


Where Austin Renters Buy Furniture (Beyond IKEA)

This is where Austin renters have a real advantage.

The secondhand furniture market here is unusually strong—a combination of UT Austin’s massive student turnover, a population that skews young and mobile, and a thriving vintage culture. If you’re willing to hunt, you can furnish an apartment for 40-60% less than buying everything new.

Here’s what that looks like in practice.

IKEA Round Rock: The Anchor Store

Address: 1 IKEA Way, Round Rock, TX 78664 (about 20 minutes north of downtown)

IKEA is the default for a reason. Prices are transparent. Quality is predictable. You can see and touch everything before you buy. But there’s some stuff worth knowing:

The As-Is section is the real move. Near the exit, they sell returned items, floor models, and pieces with minor damage at 30-70% off. I’ve seen MALM dressers for $80 (normally $180) and KALLAX shelving for $40 (normally $90). Stock rotates constantly. Saturdays have the freshest selection.

Delivery costs add up. IKEA delivery runs $5 for small parcels and $49+ for truck delivery, depending on order size and distance. For a full apartment’s worth, expect the higher end. If you’ve got access to a truck or SUV, pickup saves real money.

Assembly isn’t free either. IKEA TaskRabbit assembly starts at a $52 minimum, with prices calculated per item based on complexity. Independent TaskRabber rates average $35/hour—a full bedroom set might take 3-4 hours.

Austin Secondhand Hotspots

These are the stores I send clients to when they want quality without retail prices.

Habitat for Humanity ReStore (2 Austin-area locations)

Inventory is donation-based—hit or miss. But the prices are strong. Sofas for $75-$200, dining sets for $50-$150, and occasional high-end pieces that slip through at thrift prices. Check back weekly. Good stuff moves fast.

Room Service Vintage (117 N. Loop Blvd E, Austin, TX 78751) Higher-end curated vintage. They’re selective about what they accept, which means consistent quality. Sofas run $300-$800, accent chairs $150-$400, mid-century pieces throughout. Not thrift-store cheap, but 40-60% less than buying equivalent quality new.

Blue Velvet (217 W. North Loop Blvd, Austin, TX 78751) The go-to for mid-century modern. Want the West Elm/CB2 look without those prices? This is your store. Dressers, desks, credenzas, dining chairs—all in the $100-$500 range.

Remix Market (9709 Brown Ln Suite A, Austin, TX 78754) Resale store with rotating furniture and home décor—vintage pieces, estate treasures, gently used stuff. Quality varies, but they have good bones furniture at reasonable prices. Worth checking before buying new.

Austin Furniture Depot (7511 Burnet Rd, Austin, TX 78757) Focuses on gently used mainstream furniture—the stuff you’d find at Ashley or Rooms to Go, but at 50-70% off. Good option if you want “normal” furniture, not vintage.

Furniture Row: Anderson Lane District For a one-stop furniture shopping trip, the Anderson Lane corridor near Burnet Road has several stores within walking distance. Four Hands Outlet at 2020 W Anderson Ln carries designer closeouts at 40-60% off retail. Nadeau – Furniture with a Soul at 2108 W Anderson Ln has handmade global pieces at reasonable prices.

Estate Sales: The Insider Strategy

Estate sales are where the real deals happen. But they require more effort than walking into a store.

How to find them:

  • EstateSales.net Austin: Filter by zip code, check new listings Thursday/Friday for weekend sales
  • City-Wide Vintage Sale: Happens monthly at Palmer Events Center (900 Barton Springs Rd). 80-100+ vendors, thousands of pieces. Check their schedule.
  • Nextdoor app: Neighbors post estate sales here. Often less competition than the advertised ones.

Timing matters:

  • Day 1 (usually Saturday): Best selection, full prices
  • Day 2 (Sunday): 25-50% off, good stuff still available
  • Day 3 (if there is one): 50-75% off, picked over but deals exist

What to target: Solid wood furniture—dressers, dining tables, bookshelves. Quality sofas from non-smoking homes. Anything mid-century. Avoid upholstered pieces you can’t inspect thoroughly. Same bedbug concerns as random Marketplace finds.

Online Local Markets

Facebook Marketplace Austin The largest local marketplace. Quality varies wildly. Tips for actually finding good stuff:

  • Search specific items, not just “furniture”
  • Filter by “local pickup only” to dodge scam listings
  • Check seller profiles—established accounts with history are safer
  • Meet in public for small items. For large ones, bring someone and trust your gut.
  • Cash only. Inspect before paying.

Buy Nothing Austin groups Free furniture from neighbors. Quality ranges from “perfect hand-me-down” to “why did they think anyone wanted this.” But the price is right. Good for basics like bookshelves, small tables, and starter pieces.

Craigslist Austin Still exists. Still has deals. Requires more scam awareness than Marketplace. The upside? Some sellers only post on Craigslist, so there’s less competition for good pieces.

Seasonal Timing: When to Hunt

Best times to buy used furniture in Austin:

  • Late May: UT graduation plus lease turnover. Students dump furniture rather than move it. Marketplace floods with barely-used IKEA basics.
  • Early August: Same thing. New students arrive, previous tenants leave.
  • End of any month: People moving out of apartments often need to offload furniture fast.
  • January: Post-holiday purge. People upgrade furniture as gifts; old pieces hit the secondhand market.
  • Labor Day / Presidents Day weekends: Retail sales put pressure on resale prices.

Worst time: September through November. Moving activity slows, secondhand inventory drops, prices creep up.


The Extra $500–$1,500 Austin Renters Forget to Budget

Here’s what I see renters underestimate most: the costs that aren’t furniture.

You budget $4,000 for furniture. You find a sofa, a mattress, a dining table, some bedroom pieces—you’re feeling good. Then reality hits. Delivery is $200. Assembly is $150. Sales tax is $330. You still need curtains, hangers, a shower curtain, trash cans, and about a dozen other things that cost $15-$40 each but somehow add up to $300.

Your $4,000 budget is suddenly $5,200.

Here’s what gets forgotten.

Delivery Fees

SourceTypical CostNotes
IKEA Round Rock$5–$49+Small parcels from $5, truck delivery from $49. Free pickup available.
Wayfair$0–$150Free on orders $35+, but oversized items cost extra
Amazon$0–$100Prime covers most stuff; large items may have a charge
West Elm / Pottery Barn$99–$299Premium delivery with assembly available
Facebook Marketplace$0–$100Often pickup only; use TaskRabbit for delivery
Local secondhand stores$50–$150Most offer delivery for a fee

Budget: $100–$300 for a full apartment’s worth of deliveries

Assembly Costs

If you’re not handy—or you just don’t have time—assembly adds up fast:

ServiceCostNotes
IKEA TaskRabbit assembly$52 minimumFlat-rate per item; book through IKEA checkout
Independent TaskRabbit$18–$80/hourAverages $35/hour; varies by Tasker
Furniture store assembly$50–$150/itemSometimes included with premium purchases
Handy.com$50–$100/itemFlat-rate option

A fully assembled IKEA bedroom (bed frame, dresser, nightstands) typically runs $150–$250 in labor.

Austin Sales Tax: The 8.25% Reality

This catches out-of-state relocators especially. Texas has no income tax, but we’ve got sales tax. It applies to furniture.

Austin’s combined rate is 8.25%: 6.25% state plus 2% local (city, county, transit).

Quick math on a $5,000 furniture purchase:

  • Sales tax (8.25%): $412.50

That’s real money. Budget for it.

Most Austin stores include tax in their floor prices. But online purchases often add it at checkout. Verify before assuming you know the total.

“The Small Stuff” That Adds Up

Here’s a realistic list of things people forget until they’re standing in their empty apartment:

CategoryItemsTypical Total
Window coveringsCurtains, rods, blinds$100–$300
Closet organizationHangers, organizers, shoe rack$50–$150
Bathroom basicsShower curtain, mat, towels, toiletry storage$75–$175
Cleaning suppliesVacuum, mop, broom, products$75–$200
Kitchen basicsDish soap, sponges, trash bags, etc.$40–$80
LightingExtra lamps, bulbs$50–$150
Bedding accessoriesMattress protector, extra pillows$50–$100
Command hooks/mountingHanging without damaging walls$20–$50
Extension cords/power stripsNever enough outlets$30–$60
Door matsEntry and bathroom$30–$60

“Small stuff” total: $520–$1,325

This is why I tell people to add $500–$1,500 to their furniture budget for “everything else.” Sounds high until you move in and realize you need all of it.

Move-In Timing Costs

If your furniture doesn’t arrive when you do, you’re paying for solutions:

  • Air mattress: $40–$100 (temporary, but necessary)
  • Eating out: $50–$100/day without kitchen basics
  • Storage unit: $80–$200/month if timing doesn’t align
  • Hotel/Airbnb: $100–$300/night if the gap is significant

Ideal scenario: have essentials delivered within 2-3 days of move-in. IKEA offers scheduled delivery. Wayfair and Amazon can be less predictable. Plan for buffer time, not optimistic estimates.


Three Furnishing Strategies Austin Renters Use

There’s no single right way to furnish an apartment. What works depends on your budget, your timeline, and how much effort you’re willing to put in. Here are three approaches I’ve seen work well for Austin renters.

Strategy 1: The Phased Approach

Best for: Budget-conscious renters who aren’t in a rush and can tolerate a sparse apartment for a few months.

How it works:

Month 1: Survival Mode ($800–$1,500)

  • Mattress + basic bed frame (or just the mattress on the floor temporarily)
  • One seating option—cheap sofa or comfortable chair
  • Basic kitchen essentials to cook
  • Bathroom necessities
  • Minimal lighting

Months 2-3: Living Room Priority ($1,000–$2,500)

  • Proper sofa if you started with just a chair
  • Coffee table
  • TV stand
  • Area rug
  • More lighting

Months 4-6: Completion ($500–$2,000)

  • Dining furniture if you want it
  • Home office setup
  • Bedroom completion—dresser, nightstands
  • Decor, accent pieces, upgrades

Total over 6 months: $2,300–$6,000

Why it works: You spread the financial hit. You learn what you need versus what you thought you needed. You’ve got time to hunt for quality secondhand pieces instead of panic-buying new stuff.

The downside: Living in a half-furnished apartment isn’t fun. If you’re hosting people regularly or working from home, this approach takes patience.

Strategy 2: The Secondhand Sprint

Best for: Renters with flexible style preferences, vehicle access, and 2-4 weeks to dedicate to active hunting.

How it works:

Commit to buying 70%+ of your furniture used. Spend 2-4 weeks actively searching before or immediately after move-in.

The hunting schedule:

  • Week 1: Estate sales Saturday and Sunday, Facebook Marketplace daily checks, Habitat ReStore visit
  • Week 2: IKEA As-Is section, Blue Velvet and Room Service Vintage, Craigslist deep dive
  • Week 3: Fill gaps with targeted Marketplace searches, Buy Nothing groups
  • Week 4: Remaining essentials from IKEA or Target

Realistic budget: $1,500–$3,500 for a fully furnished one-bedroom

Why it works: You save 40-60% compared to buying new. The secondhand market grows at 7%+ annually because cost-conscious consumers keep discovering this. You often get higher quality—solid wood instead of particleboard—at lower prices. The hunt can be enjoyable if you like treasure-hunting.

The downside: Time-intensive. Nothing is guaranteed—you might not find the right sofa for three weeks. Requires a vehicle for pickups. Quality inspection matters, especially for upholstered stuff.

Strategy 3: The Quality Investment

Best for: Renters who plan to stay 3+ years, have higher budgets, and value durability over initial savings.

How it works:

Buy fewer, better pieces. Focus spending on high-use items that reward quality: sofa, mattress, desk chair. Accept that you’ll spend more upfront but replace less over time.

The priority stack:

  1. Mattress: $800–$1,500 for quality that lasts 10+ years
  2. Sofa: $1,200–$2,500 for a frame that won’t sag in two years
  3. Desk chair: $400–$700 for real ergonomic support
  4. Bed frame: $500–$1,000 for solid construction
  5. Everything else: Mix of mid-range new and quality secondhand

Realistic budget: $7,000–$15,000 for a one-bedroom

Why it works: Furniture industry data shows a quality sofa lasts 7-15 years while budget options often fail within 3-5 years. Over a decade, the “expensive” sofa costs less per year. Same logic applies to mattresses, chairs, and solid wood furniture.

The downside: High upfront cost. Requires confidence in your taste—you’re committing to these pieces. Doesn’t make sense if you move frequently or expect big lifestyle changes.


Common Furnishing Mistakes I See Austin Renters Make

After years of helping people find apartments—and hearing what happens after they move in—I’ve noticed patterns. These mistakes come up over and over.

Mistake #1: Not Measuring (Or Measuring Wrong)

The number one disaster: furniture that doesn’t fit through the door. Or doesn’t fit the space. Or blocks walkways you need.

How to avoid it:

  • Measure doorways, hallways, and stairwells before buying large items
  • Use painter’s tape to mark furniture footprints on the floor before you buy
  • Leave 30-36 inches for walkways around furniture
  • Check ceiling height if you’re eyeing tall bookshelves or lofted beds

A 90-inch sofa looks perfect online. It won’t look perfect wedged diagonally in your living room because it couldn’t make the turn from the hallway.

Mistake #2: Buying Everything at Once

The urge to “finish” furnishing immediately leads to poor decisions. You buy a dining table you never use. A chair that doesn’t fit. Decor that doesn’t match once you’re living in the space.

Better approach: Get the essentials first. Live in the apartment for 2-4 weeks before buying the “nice to haves.” You’ll learn how you use the space.

Mistake #3: Ignoring Delivery Logistics

Ordering everything online and assuming it’ll “work out” leads to:

  • Missed delivery windows because you’re at work
  • Items left outside in the weather (or stolen)
  • Delivery to apartment office with no way to get it upstairs
  • Coordinating multiple deliveries on different days for a week straight

Better approach: Schedule deliveries for move-in week when you’re available. Use IKEA pickup when possible. For large items, confirm building access and elevator availability with your apartment complex beforehand.

Mistake #4: Cheaping Out on the Mattress

I covered this earlier, but it deserves repeating. People will spend $1,200 on a sofa and $200 on a mattress.

You use the sofa a few hours a day. You spend 7-8 hours on the mattress.

Prioritize accordingly.

Mistake #5: Forgetting About Lighting

Many Austin apartments have overhead lighting that’s either harsh (builder-grade fixtures) or barely there (one sad light in the living room). If you rely solely on overhead lights, your apartment will feel like an office after dark.

Budget $100–$250 for lighting. A floor lamp, a table lamp, maybe a desk lamp. They make a significant difference in how the space feels.

Mistake #6: Over-Furnishing Small Spaces

A 700-square-foot apartment cannot hold a sectional sofa, a dining table for six, a full home office setup, AND a bedroom set with a king bed.

Something has to give.

Before buying, ask: “Does this space need this furniture? Or do I just think apartments are supposed to have this?”

Mistake #7: Skipping Window Coverings

You will regret having bare windows. For privacy. For light control. For temperature regulation—Austin sun is no joke. For making the apartment feel finished rather than temporary.

Budget $100–$300 for curtains or blinds. Do it before move-in if you can. Measuring and ordering takes time, and living without window coverings is uncomfortable.


The Furnished vs. Unfurnished Calculation Nobody Does Correctly

Here’s a question I get constantly from relocators: “Should I just rent a furnished apartment instead of buying furniture?”

Conventional wisdom says furnished costs more but saves hassle. The math tells a different story. The right answer depends on factors most articles ignore.

The Real Cost Comparison

Let’s do the calculation that furnished apartment advocates skip.

Scenario: One-bedroom apartment, 12-month lease, Austin market

FactorUnfurnishedFurnished
Base rent$1,600/month$2,200/month (+$600 premium)
Annual rent$19,200$26,400
Furniture cost (mid-range)$5,000 one-time$0
Year 1 total$24,200$26,400
Year 2 total$19,200$26,400
Year 3 total$19,200$26,400

Break-even point: If you stay 8+ months, unfurnished wins financially—even counting the furniture purchase.

But that simple math misses important details.

The Hidden Variables

Furnished apartment furniture quality varies.

Some furnished apartments have quality pieces. Most have the cheapest functional furniture the landlord could source. Think scratchy polyester sofas, mattresses of unknown age, particle board dressers. You’re paying a premium for furniture you might not want to use.

I’ve had clients move into “furnished” apartments and buy their own mattress within a week because they couldn’t sleep on what was there. Now they’re paying the premium and buying furniture.

The premium adds up fast.

In Austin’s current market, furnished units command premiums of 15-20% over comparable unfurnished units for long-term leases. On a $1,600/month apartment, that’s $240-$320 extra every month. Corporate housing and short-term rentals push even higher—40-50% premiums are common for flexible lease terms.

Your furniture has residual value.

When you leave an unfurnished apartment, you own furniture that’s worth something. A quality sofa you paid $1,200 for can sell for $400-$600 on Facebook Marketplace. A bedroom set might recover 30-50% of what you paid. That $5,000 in furniture isn’t gone—it’s $1,500-$2,500 in future resale value.

Furnished apartment furniture? You’ve paid thousands in premiums and own nothing at the end.

When Furnished Makes Sense

Despite the math, furnished apartments are the right choice for specific situations:

Stays under 6 months: The furniture investment doesn’t pencil out. Pay the premium, skip the hassle.

Corporate relocation with housing stipend: If your employer pays the rent difference anyway, take the furnished unit. Let them subsidize your convenience.

International relocators: Shipping furniture from overseas costs $3,000-$10,000. Furnished simplifies everything.

Uncertain tenure: If you might leave Austin in 3-4 months, the furniture math gets too close to call. Flexibility has value.

No vehicle access: Furnishing without a car is difficult. Delivery fees pile up. Secondhand hunting requires transportation.

The Middle Path Nobody Mentions

There’s a third option: partially furnished apartments.

Some Austin buildings offer “furniture packages” as add-ons. $150-$300/month for bedroom furniture. $200-$400/month for a full apartment package. These often make more sense than fully furnished units because:

  • You can drop the package when you’re ready to furnish yourself
  • Monthly cost is lower than the full furnished premium
  • Some buildings let you negotiate package removal mid-lease

Ask about furniture packages during your apartment search. They’re more common than most people realize, especially in newer Class A buildings.

The Framework I Recommend

Stays under 6 months: Furnished or furniture package Stays 6-12 months: Furniture package or budget furnishing (secondhand sprint) Stays 12+ months: Unfurnished with intentional furnishing Stays 3+ years: Unfurnished with quality investment—you’ll recoup the cost and own assets

The break-even math changes if you move frequently. A military family or consultant who relocates every 18 months faces different calculations than someone settling in Austin long-term. Factor your trajectory, not generic advice.


The Rent-to-Furniture Ratio: A Framework for Financial Sanity

I mentioned this earlier, but it’s worth expanding. It’s the framework I use with clients, and I’ve never seen it written up anywhere else.

The core insight: your furniture budget should correlate with your rent, not with your income or your aspirations.

Here’s why this matters.

The Psychology of the Empty Apartment

When you sign a lease—especially your first lease, or a lease in a new city—you’re emotionally vulnerable to overspending. The apartment is empty. It doesn’t feel like home. You’re stressed from moving. Every furniture ad shows beautiful, complete rooms that feel achievable if you just spend a little more.

This is how people end up financing $8,000 in furniture at 24% APR while paying $1,400/month rent they’re already stretching to afford.

The rent-to-furniture ratio provides a reality check. It says: “Your housing cost tells you something about your budget capacity. Respect that signal.”

The Ratios in Practice

Monthly RentSuggested Furniture BudgetRationale
Under $1,400$1,500–$2,500You’re budget-conscious for a reason. Furniture shouldn’t strain you further.
$1,400–$2,000$2,500–$5,000Median Austin range. Room for quality on essentials, secondhand elsewhere.
$2,000–$2,800$5,000–$10,000Higher-end unit deserves furniture that matches. Invest in longevity.
$2,800+$10,000+Luxury housing. Furniture quality should reflect the space.

The multiplier version: Furniture budget ≈ 2-4x monthly rent

At $1,500/month rent, that’s $3,000-$6,000 in furniture. At $2,500/month, that’s $5,000-$10,000. The ratio scales naturally with financial capacity.

Why This Beats Income-Based Budgeting

You might think: “I make good money. I can afford nice furniture even if my rent is modest.”

Maybe. But consider:

Rent reflects your budget priorities. If you chose a $1,400/month apartment when you could afford $2,200, you did that for reasons. Saving money. Paying down debt. Building an emergency fund. Investing. Blowing those “savings” on furniture defeats the purpose.

Furniture doesn’t appreciate. That $3,000 sofa will be worth $800 in three years, regardless of your income. Overspending on furniture is consumption, not investment.

Lifestyle inflation is sneaky. Today it’s the furniture. Tomorrow it’s the car upgrade because your nice apartment “deserves” a nicer car in the parking lot. The rent-to-furniture ratio helps maintain the budget discipline that let you choose a modest apartment in the first place.

The Exception: Long-Term Renters

If you’re planning to stay 5+ years and treat your apartment like a long-term home, the ratio loosens. Investing in a quality sofa that lasts a decade makes sense even if your rent is modest—the cost-per-year math works out.

But be honest about your timeline. Most people who say “I’ll be here for years” end up moving within 24 months. Austin’s transient. Plans change. Furnish for the tenure you can predict, not the tenure you hope for.

Applying the Framework

Step 1: Look at your rent. Say it’s $1,650/month.

Step 2: Calculate the range. $1,650 × 2 = $3,300. $1,650 × 4 = $6,600.

Step 3: Your furniture budget is $3,300–$6,600.

Step 4: If that feels too low, ask why. Is it because you need more furniture? Or because you want nicer furniture than your budget supports?

Step 5: If that feels comfortable, proceed. You’re in the rational zone.

This won’t work for everyone. But for the renters I work with—often relocating to Austin, often unsure how long they’ll stay, often stretching on rent—it’s a sanity check that prevents financial regret.


Austin Apartment Furnishing: Your Questions Answered

How much does it cost to furnish a one-bedroom apartment in Austin?

Most Austin renters spend $3,500–$8,000 to furnish a one-bedroom, depending on whether they buy new, used, or mix both. Budget-conscious renters using Austin’s secondhand markets can get it done for $2,000–$3,500. Those prioritizing quality typically land in the $8,000–$12,000 range.

Should I buy furniture new or used?

Mix both strategically. Buy new: mattresses (always—hygiene), desk chairs (ergonomics matter), and items you’ll use daily for years. Buy used: bed frames, dressers, dining tables, bookshelves, accent pieces. Austin’s secondhand market is strong enough that you can find quality used furniture at 40-60% off retail prices.

How long does it take to furnish an apartment?

With focused effort, 2-4 weeks for a complete setup. The phased approach takes 3-6 months. If you’re hunting primarily secondhand, budget extra time—finding the right pieces takes patience. Online orders from Wayfair and Amazon typically arrive within 1-2 weeks. IKEA scheduled delivery can be booked for specific dates.

Is IKEA furniture good enough for an apartment?

Yes, with caveats. Quality varies by product line. The MALM and HEMNES bedroom lines hold up well. The PAX wardrobe system works great. Sofas are hit-or-miss—the FRIHETEN is popular for a reason, but fabric options wear faster than leather alternatives. For furniture you’ll keep 5+ years, consider investing beyond IKEA for high-use items.

What furniture should I buy first?

Priority order: (1) Mattress and bed frame—you need to sleep. (2) Seating—sofa or comfortable chair. (3) Basic kitchen essentials—you need to eat. (4) Bathroom necessities. (5) Lighting—more important than you’d think. Everything else can wait until you understand how you use the space.

Can I furnish an apartment for under $2,000?

Yes, if you commit to secondhand shopping and accept functional-over-stylish. Realistic under-$2,000 breakdown: mattress ($300 new, foam-in-box), bed frame ($50 used), sofa ($150 used), coffee table ($30 used), dining table + chairs ($75 used), dresser ($60 used), desk + chair ($150 mixed), kitchen basics ($150 new), bathroom basics ($75 new), lighting ($50), miscellaneous ($100). Total: roughly $1,190. Add $200-300 for hidden costs and you’re under $1,500.

Is it cheaper to rent a furnished apartment?

Almost never—unless your stay is under 6 months. Furnished rentals command 15-20% premiums for long-term rentals. In Austin, where median one-bedroom rent runs $1,500-$1,800, that translates to roughly $225-$360 extra per month. Over 12 months, that’s $2,700-$4,300 extra—often more than furnishing yourself. The math only favors furnished for short-term stays, corporate relocations with stipends, or situations where furniture logistics are impractical.

What appliances come with Austin apartments?

Most Austin apartments include: refrigerator, stove/oven, dishwasher, microwave (often built-in), and garbage disposal. Many include washer/dryer or washer/dryer connections. You typically need to provide: small appliances (coffee maker, toaster, blender), cookware, and kitchen tools. Verify during your tour—older units sometimes lack dishwashers or in-unit laundry.

How do I furnish an apartment without a car in Austin?

It’s harder, but doable. Options: (1) IKEA delivery starts at $5 for small items, $49+ for large, (2) Wayfair and Amazon delivery is often free, (3) TaskRabbit for Marketplace pickups runs $30-$60 per trip, (4) furniture store delivery is $50-$150, (5) rent a Home Depot truck for $19/75 minutes for concentrated shopping. The secondhand sprint strategy is difficult without vehicle access—plan for delivery-heavy purchasing or recruit a friend with a truck.

What should I NOT buy used?

Never buy used: mattresses (hygiene, bedbugs, wear), upholstered furniture from unverifiable sources (EPA bedbug guidance), cribs or car seats (safety standards change), anything with fabric you can’t inspect thoroughly. Proceed with caution: sofas from verified sources (inspect carefully, ask about smoking and pets), office chairs (check all adjustment mechanisms), anything electronic (test before paying).

About Ross Quade

Ross Quade is a licensed Texas REALTOR® and the founder of Austin Apartment Team. He helps renters find apartments across the Austin metro—and his service is completely free. (The apartment communities pay him, not you.)

He and his team have toured over 500 properties at this point. They’ve helped hundreds of renters navigate this market, from first-timers to people relocating from out of state to folks with complicated situations. Fill out the short form or call Ross at 512-943-6859.

Going to tour on your own? No problem. Just do these 3 things:

  1. On your tour: Tell them “My apartment locator, Ross Quade, referred me.” Then ask them to note it in your file.
  2. On your application: Look for the referral field on your application and enter “Ross Quade – Austin Apartment Team.”
  3. After you apply: Text 512-943-6859 and let me know where you applied.

That referral costs you nothing, lets me follow up if your application gets stuck, and keeps me in your corner if I need to advocate for you.

Ross Quade

Austin Realtor and Apartment Expert

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