(609) 441-1662
(609) 441-1662
Why does some leather furniture look better with age, and other leather furniture just looks beat up? Care, climate, and what you do (and don't do) in the first month after delivery. Leather rewards a little attention enormously and punishes neglect harder than most furniture materials. We've seen this both ways at De Avenue Furniture in Atlantic City, NJ. This guide covers what to do — and what to avoid — to make leather last decades.
Leather is animal hide that's been tanned and finished. That's worth knowing because it changes how you think about care: leather is essentially a permanent skin that needs the same things skin needs — moisture, protection from sun, and gentle cleaning.
The most common leather grades:
Care advice in this guide applies to full-grain and top-grain. Bonded and faux leather have their own rules.
Most leather care is just daily and weekly habits.
That's it for daily care. Most days, leather needs nothing.
Every three to four months, give the leather a real clean.
1. Vacuum with a soft brush attachment to remove dust and crumbs from seams and crevices. 2. Wipe down with a barely-damp cloth. Plain water is fine for most leather. Do not soak the leather — damp cloth, not wet cloth. 3. Use a leather cleaner specifically formulated for furniture leather if there's anything beyond dust. Test it on a hidden spot first (back of the sofa, underside of a cushion) to make sure it doesn't darken the finish. 4. Dry thoroughly with a clean cloth. Don't let leather air-dry damp.
Avoid these on leather:
If you only follow one rule: when in doubt, water and a dry cloth.
This is the step most owners skip, and it's the one that separates leather that lasts twenty years from leather that lasts seven.
Twice a year — typically once in fall (when central heating starts drying everything out) and once in spring — apply a leather conditioner. This replaces the oils that naturally evaporate from leather over time and keeps it from drying out and cracking.
How to do it:
1. Clean the leather first (see above) so the conditioner is going onto a clean surface. 2. Apply a small amount of conditioner to a soft cloth — not directly onto the leather. 3. Rub it in using small circular motions, working a section at a time. 4. Let it absorb for the time the product specifies (usually 10–30 minutes). 5. Buff with a clean dry cloth to remove any residue.
Less is more. Over-conditioning can leave leather feeling tacky. A thin even coat is the goal.
For most stains, blot first and ask second. Don't rub — rubbing pushes the stain deeper into the leather.
For anything bigger than a small spot — a full-pillow stain, a major scratch, a tear at a seam — call a professional leather repair service. DIY repairs almost always make things worse on real leather.
Three situations where professional cleaning or restoration is worth the cost:
A leather sofa is a long-term investment. A $150 professional cleaning at year ten is cheap compared to replacing a $2,500 sofa at year twelve because it looks beat up.
Stop by our showroom at 1300 Atlantic Ave, Atlantic City, NJ 08401 to see our full leather collection in person — our team can also recommend cleaning and conditioning products that work for the specific leather you own. We carry Ashley Furniture, Coaster Z2 Standard, Global Furniture USA, Nectar, and we deliver throughout the Atlantic City area. Browse leather sofas online, see leather sectionals for larger spaces, or check out recliners. Have questions? Visit our FAQ or call us at 609-441-1662.
Next read: Leather vs. Fabric Sofas: Pros, Cons, and How to Decide — if you're still deciding between the two, this is the post to read. Financing options available. Or visit our store.