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Ikea kitchen showroom
An Ikea kitchen showroom. The retailer is trialling renting office furniture to business customers.
Photograph: Alamy
An Ikea kitchen showroom. The retailer is trialling renting office furniture to business customers.
Photograph: Alamy

Kitchen for rent? Ikea to trial leasing of furniture

This article is more than 5 years old

Retailer to test idea of renting office furniture – but home products could be next

Ikea is to start renting out furniture as part of attempts to build a more environmentally friendly business.

The world’s largest furniture retailer said it wanted to test out the idea of leasing office furniture such as desks and chairs to business customers, starting in Switzerland. However, kitchens could also potentially be rented rather than sold in future.

The leasing strategy is part of Ikea’s wider effort to design and sell goods that can be repaired, reused, recycled or resold and promote services that prolong the life of a product.

“You could say leasing is another way of financing a kitchen. When this circular model is up and running, we have a much bigger interest in not just selling a product but seeing what happens with it and that the consumer takes care of it,” Torbjorn Lööf, the chief executive of Inter Ikea, which owns the Ikea brand, told the Financial Times (£).

He said the Swedish company was also considering launching its own spare parts business so that customers could replace components, such as hinges or screws, for furniture no longer stocked in Ikea’s stores.

An Ikea spokesperson said: “We have an ambition to inspire and enable people to play an active role in making the circular economy a reality, which we can support by developing new ways for people to buy, care for and pass on products.

“In certain markets, such as Switzerland, we’re exploring and testing potential solutions and have a pilot project to look into the leasing of furniture, but it’s still too early to confirm exactly what this will look like.”

Shoppers can already return some types of used furniture to stores in the UK for resale or donation to charity, while every store now has repair and repackaging facilities so that items damaged in transit can be sold and not wasted.

Ikea has said it wants to source 100% of its wood and paper from more sustainable sources by 2020 and plans to ditch fossil fuels by 2030.

The company has invested more than €1.7bn (£1.5bn) in renewable energy including windfarms and rooftop solar, owns more than 100,000 hectares of forest and has put money into a plastics recycling business as part of its efforts to build a more environmentally sustainable business.

This week Ikea will open what it says will be its most sustainable store yet in Greenwich, London.

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Services available will include a “learning lab” where shoppers can find out how to refurbish or repurpose old furnishings.

The developments come after Ikea’s profits fell by more than a third last year as it invested in its online business and tested smaller city-centre stores.

Last year it said it was cutting 7,500 office jobs worldwide, including 350 in the UK, to focus on improving its online operation and city-centre format.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Vintage Ikea furnishings fetch £32,000 at auction in Stockholm

  • Ikea UK profits fall by almost a fifth despite 12% increase in sales

  • Ikea plans to close Tottenham branch, putting 450 jobs at risk

  • Ikea hoists its prices and blames Covid supply pressures

  • Ikea owner warns of price rises as supply chain crisis takes toll

  • Ikea owner buys Topshop’s former London flagship store

  • Ikea goes glam rock with Zandra Rhodes collaboration

  • Ikea to trial new layout that could signal end of well-trodden store route

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