How To

How to Furnish an Apartment Inexpensively

Contributor
By eHow Contributing Writer
(27 Ratings)

Have a plan when furnishing an apartment on a budget. A disciplined, step-by-step approach works best. Make up your mind that some of your furnishings will be compromises for a while, and invest the most - by far - in pieces you intend to keep.

Difficulty: Moderately Easy
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  1. Step 1

    Set priorities - at the top of the list most likely will be a bed, living-room seating, a breakfast table and chairs, and entertainment appliances (TV, stereo); pieces such as a coffee table, china cabinet and entertainment armoire are probably marginal.

  2. Step 2

    Allot money and make purchase strictly according to these priorities and not on impulse.

  3. Step 3

    Work up a monthly budget with a maximum for furnishings purchases each month. Save for several months if necessary for the big items such as a sofa and stereo.

  4. Step 4

    Buy the mattress new if you can; it's simply more hygienic to do so.

  5. Step 5

    Think secondhand on other needed items that you can't afford to buy new, and then visit tag sales, check classified ads, check out online auction sites and ask Mom for castoffs. Plan to replace these items with new ones when you can.

  6. Step 6

    Consider unfinished and ready-to-assemble furniture if you're even remotely handy. RTA pieces usually represent good value, and they can be disassembled when you move.

  7. Step 7

    Be creative. Camouflage flaws in secondhand goods (put a pretty quilt, bedspread or tablecloth over a worn but clean and comfortable easy chair; paint a wooden kitchen chair whose varnish is scratched); hang textiles (a scarf or vintage tablecloth) and museum posters for inexpensive, high-impact wall art.

  8. Step 8

    Purchase classic-style lamps such as modern halogens or solid-color, neutral-tone ginger-jar styles that will continue to fit in as your furnishings evolve and even as your taste changes.

Tips & Warnings
  • Pick up a few tips on upgrading your secondhand purchases by visiting the local library. A basic chair cushion is usually an easy upholstery project, and how-to books can walk you through the process; painting or putting a finish on unfinished furniture is simple enough that a paint-store employee can explain it to you in a couple of minutes.
  • Remember that secondhand purchases are usually not going to be returnable. Inspect carefully before you buy.

Comments  

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djackman said

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on 3/19/2009 great tips 5*

deliseford said

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on 3/11/2009 If you live in a city, like San Francisco for instance, it is often common for people to put perfectly good things out on the street simply because someone will always take them, and it's easier than getting it to Goodwill. I have both done this and profited from it many times. On the other hand, as the comment above mentions, check for cleanliness, some things really are just garbage!

jeania said

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on 3/4/2009 Kraigslist

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 8/8/2006 Try wholesale furniture places for new furniture that's cheap. I checked the classified ads and bought a new queen mattress and box springs for $275; much better than $400-1000.

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 12/15/2005 When I moved out for the first time, I let my friends and family know what I needed or was looking for. One friend had a great couch they had no room for, and my aunts were happy to give me second-hand and extra furnishings that they wanted an excuse to replace anyway. This method falls short of shopping at relatives houses, and it's nice to know that your "new" items are clean and were taken care of.

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