Khaleej Times

Too hard to move a couch? Rental startups see a market

-

Zachariah Mohammed’s living room is filled with stuff he doesn’t own. He pays $200 a month for the sofa, side table, bar cart, dining table and four chairs in his living room. It’s worth it, the 27-year-old New Yorker says. If he needs to move, which he’s done twice in the last 12 months, he won’t need to lug a sofa across the city or worry if it will fit in a new place. The furniture-rental startup, Feather, will swap out items for something else.

“We don’t want to be stuck with a giant couch,” says Mohammed, a social media manager at a software company, who lives with Pete Mancilla and their dog.

Feather, Fernish and other companies aim to rent furniture to millennial­s who don’t want to commit to big purchases or move heavy furniture and are willing to pay for the convenienc­e. It’s part of a wave of rental culture that includes Rent the Runway, focused on women’s designer clothing, and even

Netflix and Spotify, which let you stream from a huge catalog rather than buy individual TV show episodes, movies or songs.

“They’re moving a lot.

They’re changing jobs a lot,” says Thomas Robertson, a marketing professor at the

Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, describing the types of people who would use the services. “Why would you want to be saddled with furniture?”

The furniture-rental companies target high-income city-dwellers who want a $1,100 orange love seat [$46 a month] or $980 leather bench [$41 a month] — but only temporaril­y. The furniture itself is a step up from Ikea. “I’m 32 years old and have lived in 25 different places, five different countries, 12 different cities,” says Chan Park, who co-founded online furniture rental company Oliver Space last year. He constantly bought and discarded cheap furniture. Then he moved to a furnished rental apartment in Singapore. “It was probably the first time my adult life that I felt like I was truly at home,” Park says.

These startups are in just a handful of coastal cities, with few users, but seek to grow. They offer furniture from Crate & Barrel, West Elm and smaller brands.

Others are renting out home goods, too. Rent the Runway recently added West Elm pillows and quilts. Ikea is testing a rental service in several countries outside the US, including Switzerlan­d and Belgium.

Renting may make sense for a generation that sees “life as transient,” says Hana Ben-Shabat, the founder of Gen Z Planet, a research and advisory firm.

`They’re moving a lot. They’re changing jobs a lot. Why would you want to be saddled with furniture?’

 ?? — AP ?? HOME FURNISHING: Zachariah Mohammed and Pete Mancilla in their apartment in New York.
— AP HOME FURNISHING: Zachariah Mohammed and Pete Mancilla in their apartment in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates