Every NH household has at least one: a sofa that was top-of-the-line in 1995, a solid oak dining table with a scratched surface, a wingback chair that looks rough but feels perfect. The instinct is often to replace them — but that 30-year-old piece of furniture might be built better than anything you'd buy today at twice the price. This guide helps you figure out when restoration is the smart move.

The Core Question: Are the Bones Solid?

Furniture restoration economics hinge almost entirely on one thing: the structural integrity of the piece. A well-built frame and solid joinery are worth restoring. Cheap particle board construction is not.

Here's how to assess a piece quickly:

When Restoration Makes Clear Financial Sense

There's a simple test: compare the restoration cost to the replacement cost for a piece of equivalent quality. Modern furniture at big-box retailers is often made with cost-cutting that wasn't present 30–40 years ago. An older piece with solid hardwood construction and quality joinery might cost $400–800 to restore (reupholstery, frame repair, refinishing) while its quality equivalent today would cost $1,500–3,000 or simply isn't available at any price.

The math typically favors restoration when:

What Restoration Typically Involves

Wood Furniture (Tables, Chairs, Cabinets)

Refinishing a table or cabinet means stripping the old finish, sanding, repairing any surface damage, and applying a new stain and topcoat. The result on quality wood is often dramatically better than the worn original. Frame repairs — re-gluing loose joints, replacing a cracked leg, tightening loose tenons — are typically straightforward carpentry work.

Upholstered Furniture (Sofas, Chairs, Ottomans)

Reupholstery involves stripping the old fabric, inspecting and repairing the frame, replacing or restoring the cushioning and spring system, and recovering with new fabric. The labor is substantial — a full sofa reupholstery is a multi-day job — which is why the piece needs to be worth it. If the frame and spring system are solid, the result is a piece that will last another 25 years.

When to Let Go

Some pieces genuinely aren't worth restoring. These include:

A Note on New Hampshire's Climate

NH's humidity swings affect furniture too. Solid wood furniture that spent decades in a humidified home may show seasonal movement — that's actually a sign the wood is alive and well. Antique and vintage pieces from NH homes are often in better structural shape than their age suggests because they were built with real wood and properly cared for. Don't assume age equals poor condition.

VixFix handles furniture restoration for NH homeowners — from dining table refinishing to sofa reupholstery. If you have a piece worth saving and you're not sure of the best approach, call Justin for an honest assessment. 603-202-5309.