Furniture and homeware chair Rather than being sold pre-assembled, much of IKEA's furniture is designed to be
assembled by the customer. The company claims that this helps reduce costs and use of packaging by not shipping air; the volume of a bookcase, for example, is considerably less if it is shipped unassembled rather than assembled. This is also more practical for European customers using public transport, because flat packs can be more easily carried. IKEA contends that it has been a pioneering force in
sustainable approaches to
mass consumer culture. Kamprad calls this "democratic design", meaning that the company applies an integrated approach to manufacturing and design (see also
environmental design). In response to the
explosion of human population and material expectations in the 20th and 21st centuries, the company implements
economies of scale, capturing material streams and creating manufacturing processes that hold costs and resource use down, such as the extensive use of
medium-density fibreboard ("MDF"), also called "particle board". Notable items of IKEA furniture include the
Poäng armchair, the
Billy bookcase, and the
Klippan sofa, all of which have sold by the tens of millions since the late 1970s and early 1980s. The IKEA and LEGO brands teamed up to create a range of simple storage solutions for children and adults.
The "IKEA Effect" The IKEA effect is a phenomena where customers value an item more if they contributed to its creation, compared to an otherwise identical pre-assembled item. Although named after IKEA's flat-packed furniture, it also applies to other assembly-required items such as LEGO. The effect is only seen after construction, with consumers believing they would be willing to pay more for pre-assembled items beforehand. . Possible explanations for the increase in value include the enjoyment of the assembly process and increased feelings of competency from a successful construction. If the item is subsequently disassembled, or the consumer fails to assemble it, the increased value is lost. comes from a group who hack and create new things using IKEA products. The DIY hackers use IKEA products to make new unique items. The IKEA Hackers have created a community with the DIY style projects.
Furniture and product naming IKEA products are identified by one-word (occasionally, two-word) names, predominantly in the
Swedish language (or otherwise
Scandinavian in origin). With few exceptions, most product names are based on a special naming system developed by the company. The company founder Kamprad was
dyslexic, and found that naming the furniture with proper names and words, rather than a long product code, made the products easier to identify and remember. Products are usually named after locations in Scandinavian countries, using names of places in Sweden for sofas and coffee tables, Denmark for textiles, and Norway for beds. Lamps get their names from seas and lakes, while outdoor furniture is named after islands. A number of IKEA's products bearing Swedish names have (or have had) pronunciations that are humorous to some and
offensive to others (but no less "
lost-in-translation"), by not only English-speakers but speakers of many different languages. At times, this product identification has resulted in certain names being changed or withdrawn completely from certain markets. More often than not, this confusion is simply a result of the Swedish language not being executed correctly, let alone understood, by the reader; nonetheless, this has resulted in potentially "naughty"—or even gravely offensive—connotations, depending on the area in question. Notable examples (for English-speakers) include a since-discontinued (2013) computer desk called
jerker (referring to "the jerks" or "jerks"), a foliar plant spray called
fukta ("moisten"), a
workbench called
fartfull ("speedy", "quick"), and a table called
lyckhem (pronounced roughly as "
look-em"), meaning "bliss" or a "happy home". Due to several products being named after real places, some locales have ended-up sharing names with objects considered generally unpleasant, such as a
toilet brush being named after the lake of
Bolmen, or a
rubbish bin named after the Norwegian village of
Tofte. In November 2021, VisitSweden.com launched a
jocular campaign named "Discover the Originals", which invited tourists to visit the physical locations that have received such unfortunate associations with IKEA products.
Design services , United States, in 2019, which closed in January 2022 In March 2021, IKEA launched IKEA Studio in partnership with
Apple Inc., an app enabling customers to design full-scale rooms with IKEA furniture using
augmented reality on an
iPhone. In June 2022, IKEA launched IKEA Kreativ, a digital interior-design tool integrated into the IKEA app and IKEA.com that allows users to visualize furniture in their own living spaces. The underlying computer-vision and spatial-mapping technology was developed by Geomagical Labs, a retail-technology company acquired by Ingka Group, IKEA’s largest retailer, in April 2020. As of 2024, IKEA Kreativ is available in more than 29 IKEA markets worldwide, including India.
Smart home In 2016, IKEA started a move into the smart home business. The IKEA TRÅDFRI smart lighting kit was one of the first ranges signalling this change. IKEA has also started a partnership with
Philips Hue. The wireless charging furniture, integrating wireless
Qi charging into everyday furniture, is another strategy for the smart home business. A collaboration to build
Sonos smart speaker technology into furniture sold by IKEA was announced in December 2017. The first products resulting from the collaboration launched in August 2019. Under the product name SYMFONISK, IKEA and Sonos have made two distinct wireless speakers that integrate with existing Sonos households or can be used to start with the Sonos ecosystem, one that's also a lamp and another that's a more traditional-looking bookshelf speaker. Both products, as well as accessories for the purpose of mounting the bookshelf speakers, have gone on sale worldwide on 1 August. From the start, IKEA SYMFONISK can only be controlled from the Sonos app, but IKEA added support for the speakers in its own Home Smart app to be paired with scenes that control both the lights, air purifiers, smart plugs and smart blinds together with the speakers.
Houses and flats IKEA has also expanded its product base to include flat-pack houses and apartments, in an effort to cut the prices involved in a first-time buyer's home. The IKEA product, named BoKlok, was launched in Sweden in 1996 in a joint venture with
Skanska. Now working in the Nordic countries and in the UK, sites confirmed in England include London,
Ashton-under-Lyne,
Leeds,
Gateshead,
Warrington, Bristol, and
Liverpool.
Solar PV systems At the end of September 2013, the company announced that solar panel packages, so-called "residential kits", for houses would be sold at 17 UK stores by mid-2014. The decision followed a successful pilot project at the Lakeside IKEA store, whereby one
photovoltaic system was sold almost every day. The solar
CIGS panels are manufactured by
Solibro, a German-based subsidiary of the Chinese company
Hanergy. By the end of 2014, IKEA began to sell Solibro's solar residential kits in the Netherlands and in Switzerland. In November 2015, IKEA ended its contract with
Hanergy and in April 2016 started working with
Solarcentury to sell solar panels in the United Kingdom. The deal would allow customers to be able to order panels online and at three stores before being expanded to all United Kingdom stores by the end of summer.
Furniture rental In April 2019, the company announced that it would begin test marketing a new concept, renting furniture to customers. One of the motivating factors was that inexpensive IKEA products were viewed as "disposable" and often ended up being scrapped after a few years of use. This was at a time when, especially younger buyers, said it wanted to minimize its impact on the environment. The company understood this view. In an interview, Jesper Brodin, the chief executive of Ingka Group (the largest franchisee of IKEA stores), commented that "climate change and unsustainable consumption are among the biggest challenges we face in society". The other strategic objectives of the plan were to be more affordable and more convenient. The company said it would test the rental concept in all 30 markets by 2020, expecting it to increase the number of times a piece of furniture would be used before recycling.
Restaurant and food markets , Philippines , British Columbia, Canada , Chile The first IKEA store opened in 1958 with a small cafe that transitioned into a full-blown restaurant in 1960 that, until 2011, sold branded Swedish prepared specialist foods, such as meatballs, packages of
gravy,
lingonberry jam, various biscuits and crackers, and salmon and
fish roe spread. The new label has a variety of items, including chocolates, meatballs, jams, pancakes, salmon, and various drinks. Although the cafes primarily serve Swedish food, the menu varies based on the culture, food, and location of each store. With restaurants in 38 countries, the menu often incorporates local dishes, including shawarma in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, poutine in Canada, macarons in France, and gelato in Italy. In Indonesia, the Swedish meatballs recipe is changed to accommodate the country's halal requirements. Stores in Israel sell
kosher food under rabbinical supervision. The kosher restaurants are separated into dairy and meat areas. In many locations, the IKEA restaurants open daily before the rest of the store and serve breakfast. All food products are based on Swedish recipes and traditions. Food accounted for 5% of IKEA's sales by 2019. IKEA sells plant-based meatballs made from potatoes, apples, pea protein, and oats in all of its stores. According to United States journalist
Avery Yale Kamila, IKEA began testing its plant-based meatballs in 2014, then launched the plant-based meatballs in 2015 and began testing
vegan hot dogs in 2018. In 2019, journalist James Hansen reported in
Eater London that IKEA would only sell vegetarian food at Christmas time.
Småland Every store has a children's
play area, named Småland (Swedish for
small lands; it is also the Swedish province of
Småland where founder Kamprad was born). Parents drop off their children at a gate to the playground and pick them up after they arrive at another entrance. In some stores, parents are given free
pagers by the on-site staff, which the staff can use to summon parents whose children need them earlier than expected; in others, staff summon parents through announcements over the in-store public address system or by calling them on their mobile phones. The largest Småland play area is located at the IKEA store in
Navi Mumbai, India.
IKEA Preowned In August 2024, Ikea announced it would be trialing an online marketplace where customers can connect to buy and sell pre-owned items made by Ikea. The marketplace, called "IKEA Preowned", would run from August until December 2024 and be centred on the cities of Oslo, Norway and Madrid, Spain.
Other ventures in Russia Until 28 September 2023, IKEA owned & operated the
MEGA Family Shopping Centre chain in Russia. Its operations have since been sold to
Gazprombank. At launch it was the cheapest
pay-as-you-go network in the UK. In June 2015 the network announced that its services would cease to operate from 31 August 2015. , IKEA has a joint venture with
TCL to provide Uppleva integrated HDTV and entertainment system products. In mid-August 2012, the company announced that it would establish a chain of 100 economy hotels in Europe, but, unlike its few existing hotels in Scandinavia, they would not carry the IKEA name, nor would they use IKEA furniture and furnishings – they would be operated by an unnamed international group of hoteliers. As of 30 April 2018, however, the company owned only a single hotel, the IKEA Hotell in Älmhult, Sweden. It was previously planned to open another one, in
New Haven, Connecticut, United States, after converting the historic Pirelli Building. The company received approval for the concept from the city's planning commission in mid-November 2018; the building was to include 165 rooms, and the property would offer 129 dedicated parking spaces. Research in April 2019 provided no indication that the hotel had been completed as of that time. The building was then sold to Connecticut architect and developer Becker + Becker for $1.2million. Opening in 2022 under
Hotel Marcel, it is managed by Charlestowne Hotels and became part of Hilton's Tapestry Collection. From 2016 to 2018, IKEA sold a commuter
belt-driven bicycle, the Sladda. In September 2017, IKEA announced it would be acquiring the UD company
TaskRabbit. The deal, completed later that year, has TaskRabbit operating as an independent company. In March 2020, IKEA announced that it had partnered with
Pizza Hut Hong Kong on a joint venture. IKEA launched a new side table called SÄVA. The table, designed to resemble a
pizza saver, would be boxed in packaging resembling a
pizza box, and the building instructions included a suggestion to order a Swedish meatball pizza from Pizza Hut, which would contain the same meatballs served in IKEA restaurants. In April 2020, IKEA acquired AI imaging startup Geomagical Labs. In July 2020, IKEA opened a
concept store in the
Harajuku district of Tokyo, Japan, where it launched its first ever
apparel line. Ingka Centres, IKEA's malls division, announced in December 2021 that it would open two malls, anchored by IKEA stores, in
Gurugram and
Noida in India at a cost of around . Both malls are expected to open by 2025. In 2016, IKEA Canada partnered with the Setsuné Indigenous Fashion Incubator, co-founded by
Sage Paul, to design and produce the collection ÅTERSTÄLLA, which means to restore, heal, or redecorate, and it was made entirely from salvaged Ikea textiles, reflecting the traditional Indigenous value to "use everything".
Product recalls ''Product recalls should not uniformly be considered
criticism of IKEA, though some do come under this rubric. Listed here are more 'generic' recalls that have not been elevated to the level of 'criticisms'.'' • In late 2025, a recall of over 43,000
garlic press utensils was made due to the potential for metal to detach in small pieces and be included in the garlic used for cooking, potentially leading to injury while ingesting dishes including such processed garlic. ==Corporate structure==