# How to Protect Furniture During a Renovation

**By Megafurniture Admin** · 2026-06-03

![](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/protect-furniture-during-renovation_8a5ee2fc-d7ba-44ec-b74b-924047c14d1f.png?v=1780480861)To protect furniture during a renovation, move every piece out of the work zone before the contractors arrive. Wrap upholstery in sealed plastic sheeting, cover hard surfaces with moving blankets or foam padding, seal drawers and doors with painter’s tape, and store the most vulnerable items in a clean, dry room away from dust and impact.

The detail that matters most is sealing, not just covering. Fine construction dust travels through loose draping and settles into foam, fabric, and timber joints.

Renovation dust behaves differently from ordinary household dust. It is finer, heavier in volume, and carries alkaline particles from plaster, cement, and sanded timber that can degrade upholstery fibres and dry out leather over time.

A sofa left in an open room with a single dust sheet across it will look covered. It will not be protected.

This guide works through the practical steps for homeowners who want their furniture to emerge from a renovation in the same condition it entered.

## What You Will Need Before You Begin

The materials themselves are not expensive. What matters is having them in the right quantities before the contractors start, because attempting to source them on day two of a hack-out is a reliable way to lose a day and still find your furniture inadequately covered.

-   Heavy-duty plastic sheeting, at least 100 microns thick, enough to wrap each upholstered piece fully with overlap
-   Packing tape or gaffer tape for sealing plastic seams
-   Painter’s tape, low-tack, for furniture surfaces where strong adhesive would mark timber, leather, or lacquered finishes
-   Moving blankets or thick furniture pads for hard pieces such as dining tables, bed frames, and cabinets
-   Stretch wrap film, the type used for pallet wrapping, for securing blankets around awkward shapes
-   Cardboard corner protectors for table legs, chair corners, and bed frame posts
-   Zip-lock bags and small labels for screws, bolts, and any hardware you remove
-   A clean, dry room or storage space that can be sealed off from the renovation zone

If the renovation spans more than one room simultaneously, professional short-term furniture storage is worth pricing before you begin.

A few weeks in a storage facility costs less than re-upholstering a sofa or refinishing a dining table.

## Step 1: Assess the Renovation Scope and Identify What Is at Risk

Not every renovation carries the same risk profile.

Hacking concrete, grinding tiles, or sanding walls generates fine airborne dust for days after the visible work has stopped.

Carpentry work, painting, and electrical work are lower-risk but introduce their own hazards: wood shavings, paint overspray, and drilling vibration.

Walk through the work scope with your contractor before anything is moved, and mark which rooms will be active zones, which will be transit zones for workers moving through, and which can be sealed off entirely.

The pieces that need the most careful protection are those with porous or textured surfaces: fabric sofas, timber dining tables with matte lacquer or oil finishes, upholstered headboards, and mattresses.

Leather is more resilient, but alkaline dust and paint fumes can dry the surface over weeks of exposure.

Hard, non-porous surfaces such as sintered stone, tempered glass, and powder-coated metal are more forgiving, though they still need padding against impact.

## Step 2: Move Furniture Out of the Work Zone Entirely Where Possible

The single most effective protection is physical distance from the work.

Covering furniture in place in an active renovation zone is the compromise when moving is impractical. It is not the preferred approach.

A fabric sofa can absorb weeks of fine dust through any covering that is not fully sealed, and the cleaning required afterward, professional extraction in most cases, will cost more than the move would have.

For a typical HDB renovation, the living room and bedrooms are often used as staging areas for building materials.

Confirm with your contractor which room can be kept clean and sealed throughout the project.

The room you designate as the safe zone should have its door kept closed and any gaps at the base sealed with draught tape or a rolled towel.

This detail is often overlooked on first-home renovations. The door is closed, but the gap underneath functions as a dust channel for six weeks.

## Step 3: Wrap Upholstered Pieces Fully and Seal the Seams

Upholstery is the surface most vulnerable to renovation damage, and the wrapping process should be treated accordingly.

A dust sheet draped loosely over a sofa covers it. It does not seal it.

The method that holds is the same used by professional furniture movers: full wrap in heavy-duty plastic, seams overlapped by at least 15 cm, and every seam taped closed.

For a sofa, start by removing any loose cushions and wrapping them separately.

Wrap the main frame from the base up, working the plastic around the arms and back and taping as you go.

The goal is a sealed envelope, not a loose jacket.

For fabric sofas in particular, check that the plastic is not pressing against the weave under tension across a long period. Some synthetic fabrics can develop a permanent imprint if plastic is stretched tightly against them in high humidity.

Stretch wrap film is better for odd shapes. Flat plastic sheeting is better for large, regular surfaces.

Leather requires an additional step.

Before wrapping, apply a thin coat of leather conditioner to the surface. Renovation environments are dry in some phases and humid in others, and unconditioned leather is more likely to develop surface cracking during prolonged coverage.

After the renovation, remove the covering and allow the leather to breathe for twenty-four hours before applying conditioner again.

## Step 4: Protect Hard Furniture Surfaces Against Impact and Abrasion

Dining tables, bed frames, sideboards, and display cabinets face a different set of risks during a renovation.

It is not dust alone, but the impact of tools, materials, and workers moving through a confined space.

A corner hit on a sintered stone table is unlikely to mark the stone, but it can crack the edge. The same corner hit on a lacquered timber table will leave a dent that no amount of polishing recovers.

The approach here is layered.

Moving blankets or furniture pads wrap around the piece first, providing impact absorption.

Stretch wrap film holds the blankets in place without tape touching the surface directly.

Cardboard corner protectors go on every exposed edge: table corners, chair legs, bed frame posts, and cabinet door edges.

For a dining table in a transit zone, it is also sensible to lay a sheet of plywood or cardboard across the wrapped top surface to distribute any impact that comes from materials being set down carelessly.

Timber furniture, particularly pieces with oil or wax finishes, benefits from a period of re-conditioning after a renovation.

The combination of dust, cleaning agents, and dry air can draw moisture from the wood.

A good-quality timber oil or wax applied after the renovation is complete and the piece is thoroughly cleaned will restore the surface and reveal the character of the grain again.

## Step 5: Protect Mattresses and Bedroom Furniture With Care

Mattresses are disproportionately vulnerable during renovations and disproportionately overlooked.

A mattress left on a bed frame in a room adjacent to an active work zone will absorb dust, debris, and potentially paint fumes into the foam layers over weeks.

The cover can be wiped clean. The interior cannot be easily remediated.

A dedicated [mattress protector](https://esteller.sg/collections/mattress-pillow-protectors) helps under normal conditions, but during a renovation the mattress should be in a sealed room, ideally upright against a wall to reduce its footprint, and wrapped in plastic if any dust ingress is possible.

Bed frames from [Esteller’s bed frame collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/bed-frames) built on powder-coated or lacquered metal are more straightforward to clean post-renovation than timber frames, which can trap fine dust in the grain.

For timber frames, a clean dry brush followed by a slightly damp microfibre cloth recovers the surface well.

Avoid wet cleaning timber in the period immediately after renovation when humidity in the space may already be elevated.

## Step 6: Seal and Label Hardware, and Reassemble Carefully

Renovation conditions are a reliable way to lose furniture hardware.

Drawer handles, bed frame bolts, cabinet hinges, and glass shelf supports all have a tendency to migrate during the disruption of a renovation.

Before any piece is disassembled, photograph it clearly, remove all hardware, and bag it immediately in a labelled zip-lock bag.

The bag goes with the piece, not in a drawer somewhere in the work zone.

Reassembly after a renovation should not be hurried.

Rushing joints back together in dusty conditions, or tightening bolts before the piece is correctly positioned, introduces stresses into frames that accumulate over time.

Clean contact surfaces before reassembly, check that all joints are square, and hand-tighten before applying tool pressure.

A kiln-dried hardwood frame will hold its geometry for years, but only if it is reassembled without forcing misaligned joints.

## ![](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/sofa-wrapped-for-renovation-protection.png?v=1780480861)Common Mistakes to Avoid

### Using a Single Dust Sheet and Calling It Done

A loose dust sheet is better than nothing. It is not adequate protection for upholstered furniture in an active work zone.

Fine construction dust travels laterally in air movement and will settle into any unsealed surface.

The difference between a dust sheet and a sealed plastic wrap is the difference between filtered and unfiltered exposure over a period of weeks.

### Forgetting to Condition Leather Before and After

Leather that goes into a renovation unconditioned and comes out weeks later is at real risk of surface drying.

The covering creates a microclimate. Conditioning the leather before coverage and after removal is what keeps the surface from registering the stress of that period.

### Leaving Mattresses on Beds in Adjacent Rooms

Dust travels further than the visible work area.

An adjacent room with a closed door is a partial barrier. Unless that room is also sealed at the base and any ventilation gaps are addressed, the mattress inside it is absorbing renovation byproducts throughout the project.

### Storing Furniture in the Corridor or Utility Area Without Covering It

Moving furniture out of the work zone is the right instinct.

Leaving it uncovered in a corridor that workers transit through every day undoes the benefit.

Every piece that leaves the active zone should be wrapped before it is moved, not after it arrives in the staging area.

### Reassembling Too Quickly on an Unclean Floor

The impulse to restore the home to normal as quickly as possible is understandable, especially in a first home where the disruption feels acute.

Assembling furniture before the floors and walls are properly cleaned means fine debris ends up inside joints and under legs.

An hour of thorough cleaning before any reassembly happens will protect the pieces and the effort they represent.

## When It Makes Sense to Get Professional Help

For a full-flat renovation that lasts more than four weeks, professional furniture storage removes the single largest variable in furniture protection: human error during the renovation itself.

Contractors working long days in confined spaces are not focused on the condition of covered furniture in the corner of the room, and they should not be.

Professional storage facilities wrap, transport, and store the pieces in controlled conditions, and deliver them back once the renovation is complete.

For [living room furniture](https://esteller.sg/collections/living-room-furniture) that represents a significant investment, particularly pieces in the higher tiers of Esteller’s range, the cost of professional storage is a small fraction of the replacement or restoration cost if damage occurs.

The care taken during the renovation period is part of the long-term relationship with a piece, not a separate consideration.

Post-renovation cleaning is also a case where professional help earns its place.

Fabric sofa extraction cleaning, leather reconditioning, and timber refinishing are not difficult services to source in Singapore, and they produce results that home cleaning cannot replicate for pieces that have been in a work zone.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### Can I leave my sofa in the room during a renovation if it is well covered?

It depends on what the renovation involves.

For low-dust work, such as painting a single wall or installing light fittings, a fully sealed plastic wrap is likely sufficient.

For hacking, tiling, or floor grinding, the volume and fineness of the dust generated makes in-room storage a real risk even with full coverage.

The practical test is this: if you would not want the dust on your skin for six weeks, your upholstery should not be exposed to it either.

Move the piece if you can. Seal it thoroughly if you cannot.

### How do I clean my fabric sofa after a renovation?

Start with a thorough vacuum using an upholstery attachment, going over each surface twice before introducing any moisture.

For fine residual dust, a barely damp microfibre cloth wiped in one direction lifts particles without pressing them deeper into the weave.

For heavier contamination, particularly if the sofa was in a room with grinding or sanding, professional upholstery extraction cleaning is the more reliable route.

Attempting to wet-clean a heavily dusty fabric sofa at home risks driving particles into the foam layer, where they are harder to remove.

### What is the best way to protect a leather sofa during a renovation?

Condition the leather first with a quality conditioner, then wrap the entire piece in heavy-duty plastic sheeting with all seams sealed.

Move it to the cleanest available room with the door sealed at the base.

After the renovation, remove the wrap and allow the leather to breathe for twenty-four hours before conditioning again.

Avoid direct sunlight on leather that has been covered for an extended period, as the surface can be temporarily more susceptible to fading in the first days after uncovering.

### Should I disassemble my furniture before a renovation?

For large pieces, particularly bed frames and sectional sofas, partial disassembly makes wrapping and moving significantly easier and reduces the risk of damage during transit through a work site.

Photograph each piece before disassembly, bag all hardware in labelled zip-lock bags, and keep the bags with the pieces.

Full disassembly is generally only necessary if storage space is limited and the pieces need to be stored flat or in a compact form.

### Does Esteller’s three-year warranty cover renovation damage?

The three-year warranty that applies across Esteller’s range covers manufacturing defects in materials and construction, not damage caused by external events, including renovation conditions.

This is standard across the furniture industry.

The warranty is the construction’s expression of confidence in the piece under normal use. Protecting that investment during a renovation is the owner’s part of the arrangement.

The Esteller team is happy to advise on cleaning and care for any piece after a renovation. Reach the team at hello@esteller.sg or by calling +65 6348 3144.

## A Renovation Is Temporary. The Furniture Is Not.

A first-home renovation is one of the more disruptive things a household goes through, and the furniture that will define how the home feels for the next decade is often sitting in the middle of it.

The steps in this guide are not complicated.

They require a Saturday afternoon of wrapping and moving before the contractors arrive, and an equivalent afternoon of cleaning and reassembly when they leave.

That effort is what separates furniture that emerges from a renovation with its character intact from furniture that carries the renovation with it for years afterward.

A piece built on a kiln-dried hardwood frame with high-resilience foam at 35 kg/m³ and a well-considered upholstery grade is made to be lived with for a decade or more.

The renovation is a few weeks. The investment deserves the protection.

New pieces join the [living room furniture collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/living-room-furniture) through the year, so it is always worth a fresh look once the renovation is complete and the room reveals what it needs.

Esteller’s affordable luxury range, from approximately SGD 600 to SGD 2,500, carries the same considered construction at every tier: kiln-dried hardwood frames, transparent material specifications, and the three-year warranty that applies across every piece.

Free delivery applies on orders above SGD 500.

The design team at the Sembawang showroom is available daily from 10am to 10pm to walk through configurations, material questions, and how a piece will settle into a newly renovated room.

604 Sembawang Road, #01-18 Sembawang Shopping Centre.

Reach the team ahead at +65 6348 3144 or hello@esteller.sg if you prefer.

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> Source: [Esteller Furniture](https://esteller.sg/blogs/articles/how-to-protect-furniture-during-a-renovation)
