Ikea — with its flat-packed boxes, hex wrenches, and first-apartment furniture that seldom made it to the next place in the same condition — wasn’t always the brand of choice for singletons, college seniors, and divorcees. In the mid-20th century, it was a hub of Scandinavian design and a testament to making the most out of the least. Items such as the Billy bookcase, Poäng chair, Lack table, and Klippan loveseat have seen their prices rise since Ikea landed in the U.S. in 1985, while other pieces have seen their prices soar at auction as tastes and materials change. With Ikea opening its own museum of vintage offerings, we present the following as just a few examples of furnishings that can go for well more than their initial price.Prices and availability are subject to change.Related: Delicious Foods Worth Buying at Ikea — and Some to Skip
Ake Easy Chair (1950s)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $6,900
Danish architect Philip Arctander helped give Ikea its midcentury modern sensibility with this “clam chair” — a stained beechwood lounge chair with club shaped legs and curved armrests — as his crowning achievement.
Singoalla Lounge (1961)
Courtesy of auktionsverket.seResale price: $6,052
Harald Fust designed this coveted piece, sparing no expense or detail for now-frugal Ikea. Wrapped in cerise velvet with deep-knit buttons, this fainting couch still looks gorgeous more than a half-century later.
Tufted Sofa (late 1960s)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $3,850
This three-seat brown leather tufted sofa with tubular chrome frame was designed by Johan Bertil Häggström as an Ikea original and wouldn’t look out of place in a doctor’s office or executive suite today. It’ll test your threshold for brown, but embrace the earth tones.
Eker Armchair (1961)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $1,197
Gillis Lundgren, just the fourth person hired by Ikea, made this red beech chair with a curved back with splints and a seat pad in black leather. He’s responsible for the Billy bookcase as well.
Diana Safari Canvas Chairs (1972)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale Price: $3,191
Designer Karin Mobring was behind this chair, with solid stained wood supporting a canvas-upholstered seat tied with leather straps. Inspired by a British officer’s chair, the Safari chairs in this collection have been oiled, their canvas has been washed out, and their original pillows preserved.
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $12,000
Danish furniture designer Verner Panton used a blend of bold color and futuristic patterns and angles to create works that remain influential. Only 4,000 sets of these six postmodern chairs were made. These have their original tags in place.
Black Leather Skye Chaise (1980s)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $3,200
The ’80s were as stark and minimalist for Ikea as they were for much of the decade’s design. The Skye lounger was designed by Swedish interior designer Tord Björklund and features a black leather cushion on a black canvas supported by a black painted tubular metal base. It looks more striking than comfortable.
White Jarpen Wire Chair (1983)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $715
You know Swedish designer Niels Gammelgaard’s work when you see it. Consisting mostly of metallic wire framing, Gammelgaard’s pieces often used single pieces of wire sheeting for their construction. This one remains timeless.
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Joker Easy Chair (1950s)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $2,525
Bengt Ruda used to design furniture for Sweden’s Nordiska Kompaniet department stores, but this rare adjustable Joker chair made for Ikea is also Ruda’s handiwork. The black-lacquered wooden base and metal frame under seat are still intact, and all of the upholstery and even the leather armrest are original.
Bore Lounge Chairs With Footstool (1970s)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $6,575
We saw a few of these at various auctions. That doesn’t mean it’s easy to find a pair of these 1970s leather button back lounge chairs, not to mention matching footstools, in their chocolate brown leather. The chairs and stool have light chrome tubular frames with removable leather cushions and are raised on Ferrari stamped casters. They were designed by Noburu Nakamura, the Japanese designer of Ikea’s popular Poäng chairs.
Amiral Easy Chairs (1960s)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $4,951
Mobring crops up again, this time after designing these minimalist chrome and leather chairs. A prime example of the Scandinavian Modern movement, these chairs don’t look like much, but will fetch more than $2,000 apiece.
Teak Cabinet (1955)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $2,166
Again, provenance on these pieces is hard to come by, but this teak cabinet with dovetailed drawers and adjustable shelves is both a gorgeous and rare example of Ikea’s earliest work. The golden birch lower interior of cabinet and drawers is particularly gorgeous.
Ladoga Sideboard (1960s)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $2,953
There’s scant information available on this piece by Erik Wørts. To give you an idea of how much the company has changed since, Wørts worked primarily with teak and rosewood, often accenting it with cane and leather. That level of detail, and depth of color, is absent today.
Troligen Leather Lounge Chairs (1970s)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $1,134
Häggström stuff has quite a following among collectors. The tubular metal framed lounge chairs with original brown tufted cushion and arm rests are similar to a sofa we featured earlier, and are only slightly less costly.
Guide Shelving Unit (1985)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $2,431
Gammelgaard’s minimalist metal designs got a pop of color here. Useful in the home or office, thisshelving unit has adjustable feet and is composed of particleboard, fiberboard, ABS plastic, acrylic paint, and paper shelves on a powder-coated steel structure. The shelves are white on one face but have bursts of color on the other, which can make them either really fun or painfully practical.
Winnie Armchairs (1950)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $2,311
Though French designer Pierre Frey put his name on his own design company in 1935, he did a bit of work for Ikea in the 1950s. The Winnie model uses birch wood, upholstered in quilted beige and yellow wool cloth that seems incredibly plush by Ikea standards.
Oti Lounge Chairs (1986)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $1,859
These diamond-shaped lounge chairs are the crown jewels of designer Gammelgaard’s stint with Ikea. These metal-screen chairs look like modern art.
Leather Poäng Chairs & Footrest (1970s)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $3,081
This is Nakamura’s lasting gift to Ikea and one of its top sellers to this day. It’s the leather on this particular version that makes these pieces so valuable today.
Swivel Chair (1980s)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $1,350
This low-slung lounge chair has no discernible lineage, but you definitely weren’t supposed to use it with a desk or as a table chair. Nice in front of a television or just fine in a den or family room, this navy blue aluminum beauty is stuffed with new filling for added comfort.
Axvall Lounge Chair (early 2000s)
Courtesy of 1stdibs.comResale price: $977
Gammelgaard continued his wiry metal theme well into the 21st century. This limited-edition chair featured an off-white enamel base and elastic cords as upholstery. It’s long since been discontinued.
Kroken Lounge Chairs (1970s)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $1,650
Designed by Christer Blomquist, these lounge chairs continued Ikea’s love affair with metal. Made from a tubular chrome with seats of thick, cotton canvas in beige, these chairs were featured on the cover of the 1979 Ikea catalog.
Natura Armchairs (1977)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $5,800
More comfortable Danish modern armchairs designed by Karin Mobring, these beauties still stand out today. Their pine frame looks familiar, but it’s that thick cognac-colored leather that’s the showstopper.
Midcentury Armchairs (1960s)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $1,382
Ruda was on a roll for Ikea in the 1960s. These chairs used beech wooden frames to support an upholstered canvas seat and backrest with thick leather armrests.
Hasslo Chairs (1990s)
Courtesy of pamono.comResale price: $1,260
Perhaps best known for designing Ikea’s Stockholm Bowl, dutch designer Monika Mulder also designed thisset of four lounge armchairs for Ikea’s PS Design branch. With an orange wire steel frame and a seat and back of translucent polyurethane, these chairs were part of a limited edition that’s drawing a lot of attention a generation later.
Bonus: Nejika Porcelain Kitchen Set (1990)
Courtesy of bukowskis.comResale price: $1,200
Don’t toss your old post-college dinnerware until you’re sure it’s worthless. The somewhat unlikely sale of this set of porcelain, was reported by the Daily Mail, and the price provides just some inkling of what even modest Ikea pieces, beyond the vintage furniture, can fetch.
Jason Notte is a personal finance reporter for TheStreet. His work has appeared in several outlets including The Newark Star-Ledger, The New York Times, The Huffington Post and The Boston Globe. He previously served as the political and global affairs editor for Metro U.S. and the layout editor for Boston Now, among other roles at various publications. Notte earned a Bachelor of Science in Journalism from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University in 1998