It’s one of the first questions people ask.
And it’s a fair one.
Custom furniture is not priced like something you pick up at a big box store. It’s built one piece at a time, often from solid wood furniture, designed around a specific space, and made to last for decades.
So how much does it actually cost?
In Ontario, high-end custom furniture typically ranges from $1,000 for smaller accent pieces to $7,000 or more for large dining tables or case goods, depending on size, wood species, joinery, and complexity.
That’s the short answer.
The better answer is why.
While every project is different, here’s a realistic look at what high-end custom furniture commonly costs in this market.
$3,000 – $7,000+
Dining tables tend to anchor a home, and they require more material and structural integrity than most other pieces.
A well-built dining table often becomes the center of daily life.
Cost varies based on:
A solid walnut table with custom joinery will land at the higher end of that range. A simpler maple or oak table may come in lower, but still well above mass-produced pricing.
$2,000 – $6,000+
Case goods involve more labour than people expect.
Drawers require precision.
Slides matter.
Interior construction matters.
Back panels, wood movement allowances, and structure are invisible but critical.
Storage pieces increase in cost with:
$1,000 – $3,000+
Benches, desks, nightstands, and smaller consoles fall into this range when built from solid wood with custom dimensions.
Even a smaller piece can require significant design and labour time when done properly.
These ranges reflect solid hardwood, custom-built, one-at-a-time furniture in Ontario’s higher-end market. There are lower-priced options available elsewhere, but they represent a different level of materials and construction.
The difference is structural, not cosmetic.
Mass-produced furniture benefits from:
Custom furniture is built differently.
It involves:
You’re not paying for a logo or a luxury markup.
You’re paying for time, skill, and material integrity.
Not all custom furniture is priced the same. These are the biggest cost drivers.
Joinery is the hidden structure of a piece.
Dovetails, mortise-and-tenon joints, properly constructed drawer boxes, and wood movement allowances require time and precision. They’re invisible once finished, but they determine whether the piece lasts five years or fifty.
More complex joinery equals more labour.
Wood choice has a significant impact.
Black walnut typically costs more than maple or oak. It also requires careful grain matching and often results in greater material waste due to natural variation.
Maple and oak are more economical but still premium compared to composite alternatives.
Material selection affects both price and character.
If you’re interested in how different species behave and age, I’ve written more about that in this guide to wood types.
True custom means more than picking a finish colour.
It can involve:
Each layer of customization adds design time and complexity.
Larger pieces require exponentially more material and time.
A 96-inch dining table doesn’t just use more wood than a 72-inch table. It may require thicker stock, reinforced joinery, and more finishing labour.
Before the first cut is made, there is thinking.
Refining proportions.
Confirming dimensions.
Ensuring structural soundness.
That design phase is part of the cost, even though it’s rarely seen.
A durable finish isn’t just cosmetic.
It affects:
Finishing is one of the most time-intensive parts of furniture making, especially when done correctly with proper cure times.
White-glove delivery, in-home placement, and installation all affect total cost.
Custom furniture is not something you flat-pack and carry upstairs yourself.
High-quality drawer slides, soft-close systems, and premium pulls add cost quickly.
The difference between budget hardware and durable hardware is noticeable within months of use.
Custom furniture is not simply “luxury.”
It is not a markup added for exclusivity.
It is not expensive for the sake of being expensive.
It is a different product category.
The cost reflects:
When someone believes custom equals markup, they are often comparing fundamentally different construction methods.
That depends on what you value.
If you want:
Then custom can make sense.
If you need something quickly or temporarily, it may not.
Custom furniture is rarely the fastest solution. It’s rarely the cheapest.
But it can be the most enduring.
Custom tends to make sense when:
It may not make sense if:
Clarity here saves frustration on both sides.
Custom pieces are designed to live in real homes, not staged ones.
If you’re considering a custom option, start with a realistic range in mind.
Be transparent about your budget early. A good maker can often suggest design adjustments that preserve integrity while working within financial limits.
Sometimes that means:
Good design adapts without compromising structure.
When you invest in custom furniture, you’re paying for decisions.
The decisions about joinery that you’ll never see.
The allowance for wood movement through seasons.
The proportion adjustments that make a piece feel balanced in your space.
Those details are rarely visible in photos.
They show up years later.
If you’re considering a custom furniture project, you can learn more about how I approach commissions here.
Custom furniture isn’t about chasing trends.
It’s about building something that will feel just as right years from now as it does the day it arrives.