landing page background
Virtual Staging vs Renting Furniture

Empty rooms sell slower.
One fix bills you every month.

Rented furniture costs you every month until the home sells. Virtual staging is a one-time photo edit. Here’s the honest math.

Renting furniture
$500–1k / month
  • Delivery and install fees up front
  • A monthly rental bill until it sells
  • Weeks to schedule, days to install
  • Empty again the moment the lease ends
VS
The Edensign way
$0.78 / photo, once
  • Stage the listing photos in 15 seconds
  • One-time cost — no monthly bleed
  • Every room, every angle, instantly
  • Restyle or swap rooms with one click
No credit card · your first 2 rooms are free

Confían en nosotros

Where renting furniture gets expensive

Physical staging works. The question is what it keeps costing you.

Real furniture can make a room sing. But rented furniture is a recurring bill, and four things add up fast on a vacant listing.

$500–1k
per month

The bill repeats every month

Physical staging isn’t a one-time fee — it’s a recurring rental. Each room runs hundreds a month, and the meter keeps running for as long as the home sits on the market.

Up-front
delivery + install

You pay before a single buyer sees it

Before the first showing you’re out delivery and install fees on top of the rental. If the home sells fast, you’ve paid a premium for furniture that barely earned its keep.

Days–wks
to install

The listing waits on a truck

You schedule a crew, wait for a delivery window, then lose a day to placement. The photos — and the listing — can’t go live until the room is physically dressed.

Longer
= more cost

The longer it sits, the more it bleeds

This is the trap: the slower a home sells, the more you pay. A two-month delay can double the staging bill. Virtual staging costs the same whether it sells in a week or a season.

Side by side

The honest decision matrix

Where each approach actually wins. We left the one row real furniture takes — because it does.

Factor
Rented furniture
Edensign AIRecommended
Cost structure
Recurring $500–1k / mo
One-time, from $0.78 / photoPay once, keep the images
Up-front fees
Delivery + install
NoneUpload and stage — nothing to ship
Time to live
Days to weeks
~15 secondsOn the MLS the same day it’s shot
Risk if it sits
Cost keeps climbing
Flat — pay onceNo penalty for a slow market
Extra angles / restyles
One physical setup
UnlimitedRe-stage any room with a click
Vacant land / pre-construction
Can’t place furniture
Works from a photo or renderStage what isn’t built yet
Flexibility of styles
One look
Many stylesModern, transitional, scandi & more
In-person showings & walk-throughs
Real furniture to sit on
On-screen only

Comparison reflects typical furniture-rental pricing and Edensign’s published pricing (reviewed April 2026). Real furniture wins the in-person showing — see “When to still rent furniture” below.

When each one wins

Pick the situation you’re actually in

The right call depends on the home. Tap a scenario to see the honest answer — and yes, sometimes it’s real furniture.

Use AI staging

Empty rooms photograph cold.

Buyers scroll past bare listings. You don’t need a furniture truck to fix that — Edensign furnishes the photos in ~15 seconds for a few dollars, so the staged shots are live the same day, with nothing to rent.

Furniture rental
$2,400 / 3 mo
Edensign
~$28
Run your own numbers

What is renting furniture costing you?

Renting furniture is a monthly bill that grows the longer the home sits. Set your numbers and see the difference.

Your listing

Adjust to match the home you’re staging.

5
3
Monthly furniture rental / room$250/mo
That’s 5 rooms for 3 months — rented furniture runs about $3,750.
Total to stage 5 rooms for 3 months
Rented furniture$3,750
Edensign$16
Edensign is
$3,734 cheaper
and no monthly bill while it sits — about $1,250 / month back.

Estimate only. Assumes $250/room/month furniture rental (delivery & install not shown) and Edensign at $0.78/photo, ~4 photos/room.

30-second gut check

Which is right for you?

Four quick questions. We’ll point you to the approach that fits this home — honestly.

Question 1 of 4

How long might this home sit on the market?

No hype — the real answer

When you should still rent furniture

Virtual staging isn’t the answer to everything. Here’s the honest split so you pick the right tool for the home in front of you.

Rent furniture when…

In-person & touch-and-feel

  • Occupied homeswhere buyers walk through the space in person and the rooms need to feel lived-in.
  • Model units & open houseswhere a real, dressed room sets the tone for a steady stream of in-person visitors.
  • Sellers who live stagedwhen the owner wants to actually use the furniture while the home is on the market.
  • Touch-and-feel saleshigh-end homes where sitting on the sofa and feeling the space is what closes the deal.
Reach for Edensign when…

One-time cost & no monthly bleed

  • Vacant listingsempty rooms that need to photograph warm and go live without waiting on a truck.
  • Homes that may sitwhen a slow market would turn a monthly rental into a bill that keeps climbing.
  • Tight budgetslist for a few dollars a room instead of hundreds a month in recurring rental.
  • Pre-construction & rendersmarket a unit from a photo or render long before any furniture could be delivered.
  • Trying options fastshow a seller the same room in three styles in the time it takes to book a delivery.

Virtual staging vs renting furniture — the FAQ.

Almost always, and the gap widens the longer a home sits. Renting furniture runs roughly $500–1,000 per room per month, plus delivery and install fees up front — and that bill repeats every month until it sells. Edensign stages a listing photo from $0.78 each on the Premium annual tier, paid once. For a typical vacant home, you’re comparing a few thousand dollars in rental to a few dozen in virtual staging.

Empty rooms tend to draw fewer clicks and make spaces feel smaller and colder in photos, which is why staging exists at all. Staged listings generally attract more interest online, where nearly every buyer now starts their search. Virtual staging gets you that warmer, furnished look in the photos without the cost or wait of physical furniture.

Edensign’s output is photorealistic — shadows, perspective and scale are matched to the room — so a virtually staged photo reads as a genuinely furnished space. That said, you should always disclose it. The point isn’t to fool anyone; it’s to help buyers picture the room’s potential, then disclose that the furniture is digital.

This is the honest limit of virtual staging: the home will be empty in person. For vacant listings that’s usually fine — buyers see the staged photos online, then tour the space and imagine their own furniture. For occupied or high-end homes where the in-person showing closes the deal, real furniture still has the edge, and many agents do both: virtual photos to win the click, physical staging for the tour.

Virtual staging is allowed across US markets as long as it’s disclosed and you don’t alter permanent structural features — walls, windows, built-ins. The standard practice is a “virtually staged” caption on the affected photos. Edensign keeps the architecture intact and the output MLS-ready; you add the disclosure label.

Your first 2 rooms are free, no credit card. Upload a photo of an empty room you’d otherwise be paying to furnish, pick a style, and compare the staged result against a month of furniture rental.

Two free rooms. Zero monthly bills.
Run your own numbers.

No credit card, no delivery truck, no recurring rental. Upload an empty room you’d otherwise be paying to furnish, and see the staged version in seconds.

See full pricing