- Never pay retail!
Most furniture brands can be purchased at 50% to 80% off retail at factory outlets.
I found factory owned factory outlets for about 99% of all major furniture brands, including Thomasville,
Henredon, Hammary, Councill-Craftsmen, Kincaid, La-Z-Boy, Theodore
Alexander, Mitchell Gold, Hickory White, Hooker, Bassett, Stanley, Baker, Hickory Chair, Bernhardt,
E. J. Victor, and Century.
- You'll get the best deals (50% to 80% off retail) if you go to the outlets in person
Most of the legitimate factory owned factory outlets for furniture are
located in North Carolina and southern Virginia. The average travel cost to fly to North Carolina and stay for the
weekend is $450. The savings on just one sofa or armoire can more than cover the expense of traveling to North Carolina.
In general, if you're buying more than two pieces of furniture, you'll get the best deal overall if you go to
North Carolina personally.
Example: I recently traveled to North Carolina myself to buy furniture. The price my local furniture store
charged for the furniture I wanted was $9,750.00. By traveling to North Carolina, I got the very same furniture
in new first-quality condition for only $2,200.00. Even after adding in my travel expenses and the freight cost
to have the furniture shipped to my home, I still saved about 74% off of the price I would have paid for the same
furniture locally.
- Join a group tour to North Carolina.
Going to NC to shop for furniture with a group tour can save 50%
or more on what you would pay if you make your own travel
arrangements. Most tours provide hotel rooms, plane tickets, and
transportation to the outlets (by bus) at deep discounts. Plus, many
tours have an expert guide who will take you to the outlets that have
the very best deals.
Please click
here for
information about my own factory outlet shopping tours to North
Carolina during the May and November after-market sales each year.
- Order by phone!
If traveling to North Carolina isn't practical for you, you can still save 40%-50% off retail on almost any
brand of furniture by ordering it over the phone. Although they usually aren't allowed to advertise outside of
North Carolina, there are legitimate discounters that will take your order over the phone and ship your furniture
at big discounts.
- Let the outlets arrange return freight for your purchases.
Freight lines normally give businesses a 50% discount off of the prices they charge the general public. Also many outlets
do so much business that they have their own fleet of trucks. They will deliver your purchases inside your home and put your
furniture exactly where you want, just like local furniture stores do. You would save little or nothing by renting your
own truck, not to mention having to move all the furniture yourself.
- Know what is a reasonable cost for shipping.
A good rule of thumb for freight expenses: the cost to ship your furniture home normally runs approximately
5% of the retail price. For example: an armoire costing $2,000.00 at retail would normally cost about $100.00
to ship to your home from the outlet.
Obviously, 5% of retail is
an average cost. If you live on the extreme West Coast, freight
will run a bit more. If you live near North Carolina, the
freight will run a bit less.
- Don't get taken in by phony outlets.
There is no government authority that inspects stores that claim to be outlets to be sure that they actually are. There are
hundreds of retailers all over the US that claim to be factory outlets but in fact offer little or no savings at all.
Any store can put the word "outlet" on their sign without having to substantiate to anyone that they are actually factory
owned and offer the big discounts they claim. There are no "outlet police" except for me. I am the only person who
travels around and inspects furniture factory outlets to be sure they're legitimate.
One tip off to a phony outlet: advertising in magazines. The "outlets" advertised in the backs of national
decorating magazines are almost never real factory owned factory outlets. Furniture manufacturers do not
advertise their outlets in magazines, or anywhere else outside of North Carolina, to avoid offending the local
furniture retailers all over the US who carry their products.
- Shop at the right time of year.
Many factory outlets hold special sales once or twice a year that have even better discounts. These sales are frequently
at the factories themselves and offer discounts of 75%-90% off retail. If you plan to go to North Carolina in person, be
sure to plan your trip around these sales if you can.
Example: I
attended a special unadvertised sale at the Drexel-Heritage Factory.
These sales were held
two weekends each year (unfortunately, Drexel-Heritage has since stopped
holding these factory sales). I found a beautiful king-sized brass and iron headboard and footboard that normally
retailed for $2,200.00. I only paid $149.00 for the set. Even with the cost to ship it home, I still saved
about 90% off the price my local furniture retailer charged.
Many of these sales are not advertised publicly. Please see
our free email newsletter for free
information on upcoming furniture factory outlet sales.
- Get new first-quality furniture at huge discounts.
About 95% of the furniture stocked in any factory outlet, the vast majority, is new and in first-quality
condition. Most of this furniture is either discontinued, overstocked, or has been shown to retail furniture
store buyers at a trade show. Furniture store owners look at a piece of furniture and place orders for a week,
and then the piece goes to the outlet for about 60%-75% off. That's quite a deal for a new piece of furniture
in first-quality condition.
- Beware of phony discounts offered by local furniture retailers.
Some retailers offer exaggerated discounts in an effort to compete with North Carolina discounting. They may offer
30%, 40%, or even 50% off "retail". Often, these prices are not discounts off the real retail as set by the manufacturer,
but are discounts off of a phony inflated "retail" price invented by the retail furniture store.
Example: A local retailer may take a sofa that is supposed to retail for $2,000.00, mark it up to a retail of
$3,000.00, and then put it "on sale" for $2,000.00, and call it a "1/3 off sale". In reality, the customer is
paying full retail for that sofa.
Misleading the public into believing that they are receiving bigger discounts than they actually are is illegal.
Unfortunately, it's also quite common. In 1996, a major national furniture store chain was sued by the attorneys
general of seven states and fined over one million dollars for this practice. I've personally observed these
phony discounts in retail furniture stores all over the US.