You read ingredient labels on food, skincare, and cleaning products. But the thing your family sits on for 4+ hours a day? Nobody tells you what is in it.
Cut open a typical sofa, even one that cost $5,000 or $8,000, and you will find some combination of the following:
The frame: Particle board or MDF bonded with urea-formaldehyde adhesive. Formaldehyde is classified as a Group 1 carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. It off-gasses from engineered wood products for 3 to 8 years.
The foam: Polyurethane foam, a petroleum derivative manufactured using toluene diisocyanate (TDI). During its lifespan, polyurethane foam releases volatile organic compounds including toluene, benzene, formaldehyde, and acetaldehyde. The foam is also the primary carrier for chemical flame retardants.
The flame retardants: Organophosphate esters (linked to endocrine disruption and neurotoxicity), chlorinated tris (a suspected carcinogen removed from children's pajamas in 1977 but still legal in furniture), and antimony trioxide (a possible carcinogen).
The fabric treatment: Stain-resistant coatings often contain PFAS, sometimes called "forever chemicals" because they do not break down in the environment or the human body.
None of these materials are listed on a label. There is no federal requirement to disclose furniture materials in the United States.
"Non-toxic" has no legal definition when applied to furniture. Any brand can use it. "Made with natural materials" often means one natural material is present somewhere in the product. "CertiPUR-US certified" is a real certification, but it only covers the foam, not the fabric, frame, adhesives, or finished product.
"GREENGUARD Gold certified" is significantly more stringent. It tests the assembled product in a sealed chamber, measuring emissions of over 10,000 individual chemicals at room level. Fewer furniture brands carry it because it tests everything.
The only way to evaluate a furniture brand's safety claims is to ask for documentation. Certifications with license numbers. Test results from accredited labs. Safety Data Sheets for individual materials. If a brand cannot provide these, the claims are marketing.
1. What type of foam is in the cushions? (Polyurethane, latex, or a blend?)
2. How do you meet flammability standards? (Chemical flame retardants or natural barriers?)
3. Is your fabric treated with PFAS or stain-resistant chemicals?
4. What adhesives are used in assembly? (Formaldehyde-based? Low-VOC?)
5. What is the frame made of? (Solid hardwood, plywood, particle board, MDF?)
6. Do you hold GREENGUARD Gold certification for the assembled product?
7. Can you provide Safety Data Sheets for every material?
8. Which certifications do you hold, and can you provide license numbers?
9. Where are your materials sourced?
10. What is your explicit materials exclusion list?
A brand that can answer all ten is a brand that has nothing to hide.
It depends on what is inside it. If your sofa contains polyurethane foam with chemical flame retardants (most do), it is releasing VOCs and flame retardant compounds into your indoor air. These chemicals migrate into household dust and are ingested through hand-to-mouth contact, especially by children. If you are concerned, an indoor VOC monitor can measure your current exposure.
Ask for documentation. Genuine certifications have license numbers that can be verified on the certifying organization's website. If a brand says "non-toxic" but cannot provide a specific certification with a verifiable number, the claim is marketing. If they say "natural materials" but will not disclose every material in the product, they are selectively transparent, which is the same as opaque.
Because there is no legal requirement to do so, and because disclosure would reveal the gap between marketing claims and material reality. A brand that markets "luxury craftsmanship" while using particle board frames and polyurethane foam benefits from your not knowing. Disclosure is voluntary in this industry. The brands that do it are the brands with nothing to hide.
It is off-gassing: the release of volatile organic compounds from foam, adhesives, fabric treatments, and engineered wood products. The smell is strongest in the first days and weeks, but many compounds continue to off-gas at lower levels for months to years. It is not a sign of quality. It is a chemical event.
Not necessarily. Price reflects design, brand, retail markup, and materials cost, but not always materials safety. A $7,000 sofa may use the same polyurethane foam and chemical flame retardants as a $700 big-box sofa. Price is not a proxy for purity. Certifications are.
Every layer disclosed. Every certification independently verified.