(609) 441-1662
(609) 441-1662
Why does leather cost more than fabric, and is it actually worth it? It depends on how you live. A household with kids and a dog probably wants performance fabric. A household with two adults who'd like a sofa to last fifteen years probably wants leather. Most buyers don't know which side they fall on until they see both side by side. That's the honest answer we give customers at De Avenue Furniture in Atlantic City, NJ. This guide walks through the trade-offs.
A quality leather sofa, taken care of, lasts 15–20 years. A quality fabric sofa lasts 7–12. That's the most honest difference between the two materials.
Leather develops a patina — small scratches, color variations, softening of the surface — that most owners come to like. Fabric doesn't develop character; it just shows wear. Pilling, fading, and stains accumulate, and at some point the sofa just looks tired even if the frame is still solid.
If your goal is to buy a sofa once and forget about it for a decade and a half, leather is usually the answer. If your goal is to refresh the look of the room every several years anyway, fabric makes more financial sense.
This is where the calculus flips for households with kids, pets, or anyone prone to spills.
Leather wipes clean. Spilled wine, crayons, juice — most things come off with a damp cloth and mild leather cleaner. The exception is anything sharp: a cat's claws or a dog's nails can put permanent scratches into leather that you can't undo.
Fabric ranges wildly depending on type. Performance fabrics (stain-resistant, often with a Teflon-style coating) handle most household spills as well as leather, sometimes better — wine and pet accidents wipe off cleanly. Traditional fabrics (linen, cotton, wool blends) absorb spills and require professional cleaning for anything serious.
For families with kids and pets, the practical pick is usually performance fabric or leather. Avoid traditional fabric in those households unless the sofa is in a low-traffic room.
This is the part most buyers don't think about until after they've bought.
Leather feels cold in winter and warm in summer. It takes on the temperature of the room, then transfers it to you. In a climate-controlled house this is barely noticeable. In a house that gets cold in January or hot in August, it's noticeable.
Fabric is more thermally neutral. It insulates more, so it feels warmer in winter and breathes better in summer. For a lot of buyers in extreme climates, this is the deciding factor.
Leather can be sticky against bare skin in hot weather, especially with synthetic leather or low-quality top-grain. High-quality full-grain leather breathes better but isn't as breathable as fabric.
If you live in a climate with big seasonal swings, sit on both materials in the actual showroom — you'll feel the difference within a minute.
Fabric wins here, simply because there are far more options.
If you want a specific aesthetic — a deep teal velvet, a textured boucle, a small-pattern tweed — you're going to find it in fabric, not leather.
Like-for-like, leather costs more than fabric.
If your budget is tight, performance fabric usually beats cheap leather. Bonded leather looks like a bargain and isn't.
Lean leather if:
Lean fabric if:
When in doubt, sit on both for ten minutes each in the showroom. Comfort, temperature, and how you feel about the look are all hard to predict from photos.
Stop by our showroom at 1300 Atlantic Ave, Atlantic City, NJ 08401 to see leather and fabric sofas side by side — sitting on both makes the comparison much clearer than any photo. We carry Ashley Furniture, Coaster Z2 Standard, Global Furniture USA, Nectar, and we deliver throughout the Atlantic City area. Browse leather sofas online, see fabric sofas for more variety, or check out recliners in either material. Have questions? Visit our FAQ or call us at 609-441-1662.
Next read: How to Care for Leather Furniture (and Make It Last) — if you're going with leather, this is the next thing to read. Financing options available. Or visit our store.