Patio Cushions And Accessories

Where to Buy Good Patio Furniture: Best Stores and Tips

where to buy the best patio furniture

The best places to buy good patio furniture right now are Home Depot, Costco, Wayfair, and specialty outdoor retailers, but which one is right for you depends on your budget, how fast you need it, and how much quality you're willing to pay for. If you want solid construction and a real warranty without breaking the bank, Home Depot and Costco cover most people well. If you want the widest selection and free shipping on almost everything, Wayfair is hard to beat. And if you're willing to put in a little extra legwork, local specialty stores and end-of-season clearance sales can get you genuinely high-end furniture for a fraction of the original price.

Best places to buy patio furniture by budget and style

There's no single best store, the right choice depends on what you're actually trying to accomplish. Here's how the major retailers break down by budget and what they do well.

RetailerBest ForBudget RangeStandout Perk
CostcoQuality sets, value bundles$$–$$$100% satisfaction guarantee, warehouse pricing
Home DepotMid-range to premium, variety$$–$$$$3-year limited warranty on many metal sets
WayfairHuge selection, fast delivery$–$$$Free shipping over $35, 30-day returns
WalmartBudget basics, quick pickup$–$$90-day returns, in-store pickup same day
Sam's ClubBundle deals for members$$–$$$Satisfaction guarantee, 90-day return window
Big LotsClearance deals, tight budgets$–$$Frequent markdowns, in-store finds
Lowe'sMid-range, local availability$$–$$$90-day returns, often price-matches competitors
Specialty outdoor storesHigh-end, custom, expert advice$$$–$$$$Better materials, longer warranties, knowledgeable staff

If you're shopping on a tight budget and need something this weekend, Walmart and Big Lots are your fastest options. For a full dining or conversation set with real durability, aluminum frames, weather-resistant cushions, a multi-year warranty, step up to Home Depot, Costco, or a local outdoor specialty store. And if style matters as much as price, Wayfair's catalog is enormous enough that you'll almost always find something that fits your space and taste.

How to spot good, high-quality patio furniture before you buy

The difference between furniture that lasts a decade and furniture that rusts or falls apart in two seasons usually comes down to four things: frame material, fabric quality, construction details, and whether it comes with a real warranty. Learning to check these before you click 'add to cart' (or load it into your cart at the store) saves you a lot of frustration.

Frame materials: what to look for (and what to avoid)

where to buy best patio furniture
  • Powder-coated aluminum: The best all-around choice for most buyers. Rust-proof, lightweight, and holds up in rain, humidity, and UV exposure. Look for welded joints rather than bolted ones.
  • Wrought iron: Heavy, very durable, classic look — but it will rust if the coating chips and you don't touch it up. Good for covered patios or drier climates.
  • Teak and hardwood: Premium option that weathers beautifully. Look for Grade A teak (dense, golden, few knots). It's expensive but can last 30+ years with minimal maintenance.
  • Resin wicker over aluminum: The sweet spot for looks and durability. Avoid wicker over steel frames — steel rusts at every joint, and you'll see it within a couple of seasons.
  • Thin steel tube frames: Common in budget sets at discount stores. Fine for covered areas with light use, but not for all-weather outdoor exposure.

Cushions and fabric

Look for cushion covers made with solution-dyed acrylic fabric, the Sunbrella brand is the gold standard, but many retailers sell house-brand equivalents that use similar technology. Solution-dyed means the color goes all the way through the fiber rather than sitting on the surface, so it resists fading for years. Check that the foam core is labeled 'quick-dry' or has drainage holes, and that covers are removable and machine-washable. If a listing just says 'polyester' without any specification, that's a red flag for fast fading and mold.

Construction details worth checking

  • Welded joints vs. bolted connections: Welded is stronger. Bolted can work but check that hardware is stainless steel, not zinc-plated.
  • Seat and back webbing: Should be taut with no sagging right out of the box.
  • Glass tabletops: Look for tempered safety glass (product listings usually specify this). Avoid standard glass.
  • Weight: Heavier generally means sturdier. If a full dining set ships in two boxes and weighs 40 lbs total, it's going to feel flimsy.
  • Assembly instructions: Good furniture comes with clear instructions and quality hardware. Bags of mismatched screws with no diagram are a bad sign.

Warranty as a quality signal

A manufacturer warranty is one of the clearest signals of how much confidence a brand has in its own product. Home Depot, for example, carries metal patio furniture with 3-year limited manufacturer warranties, that's a meaningful commitment. Costco's 100% satisfaction guarantee adds another layer of protection on top of whatever the manufacturer offers. If a piece of furniture at a discount store has no listed warranty at all, factor that into your decision.

Where to shop in-store: big-box, warehouse clubs, and local retailers

Shoppers inspect patio furniture on a showroom floor, feeling cushion thickness and checking chair joints.

Shopping in person still has real advantages for patio furniture, you can sit in chairs, check cushion thickness, look at how joints are finished, and walk out with something the same day. If you specifically want to rent patio furniture, you can start by checking local rental companies and seasonal pop-up services in your area. Here's where to go depending on what you're after.

Big-box stores (Home Depot, Lowe's, Walmart)

Home Depot and Lowe's both carry a strong mid-range selection with regular seasonal displays from late February through July. You can physically inspect pieces on the floor, and both stores let you check online inventory before driving over. Home Depot's 90-day return window and 3-year warranties on select metal sets make it a solid bet if you want a safety net. Lowe's matches competitor prices if you find the same item cheaper elsewhere, worth knowing before you pay. Lowe's says that most new, unused merchandise can be refunded or exchanged with a receipt within 90 days of the original purchase date, unless noted by exceptions. Walmart stores carry entry-level and mid-range sets with 90-day returns and same-day pickup on many items.

Warehouse clubs (Costco, Sam's Club)

Costco's patio selection rotates seasonally and you can't always count on a specific item being in stock, but when they have something, the value is genuinely hard to beat. Their 100% satisfaction guarantee means you can return furniture you're unhappy with, even after a season of use, which removes a lot of the buying risk. Sam's Club is similar: membership-based, rotating inventory, satisfaction guarantee, and blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">a 90-day return policy on most items. Both clubs tend to sell full sets (dining sets, conversation sets, deep-seating groups) rather than individual pieces, which works well if you're outfitting a patio from scratch.

Discount retailers (Big Lots, Tuesday Morning)

Big Lots is worth a trip if you're on a tight budget or hunting end-of-season clearance. The selection is inconsistent, you might find a great deal or nothing useful, but prices are genuinely lower than big-box stores on comparable items. Go in with low expectations and a flexible mindset, and you might be pleasantly surprised.

Local specialty outdoor furniture stores

Clean showroom interior with neatly arranged outdoor furniture sets under natural daylight

For the best long-term quality, nothing beats a dedicated outdoor furniture retailer. These stores carry brands like Brown Jordan, Tropitone, Woodard, and Telescope Casual that you simply won't find at mass-market retailers. Staff are knowledgeable, you can often customize fabric and frame colors, and warranties tend to be much longer, some covering frames for 15 to 25 years. Yes, prices are higher. But if you're buying a set you want to keep for 10 to 20 years, the per-year cost often works out to be competitive. Search for 'patio furniture store near me' or 'outdoor furniture showroom' to find local options.

Where to shop online: marketplaces, delivery vs pickup, and return policies

Online shopping opens up a much wider selection than any single physical store, and for patio furniture specifically, the delivery and return policies vary enough that they're worth comparing before you commit.

Wayfair

Hands shopping on a laptop showing an outdoor patio furniture page with delivery and returns details.

Wayfair is the largest dedicated home and outdoor furniture online retailer, and their patio selection is massive. Free shipping kicks in on orders over $35 (which covers virtually every patio furniture purchase), and most items can be returned within 30 days of delivery. The key with Wayfair is to read product reviews carefully and filter by material type, their catalog includes everything from cheap steel-frame sets to premium aluminum and teak pieces, and the price range is enormous. Use the 'material' and 'frame material' filters to narrow down to what you actually want.

Amazon

Amazon carries a wide range of patio furniture, primarily from third-party sellers. The main advantages are Prime shipping speed and a familiar returns process. The main downside is that it can be harder to evaluate quality from listings alone, look for products with hundreds of verified reviews, check for mentions of rust, fading, or assembly problems in the one and two-star reviews, and confirm whether the seller or Amazon itself is fulfilling the order (Amazon-fulfilled returns are much smoother).

Retailer websites (Home Depot, Walmart, Costco online)

Ordering online from big-box retailers combines the selection benefits of online shopping with the option of curbside or in-store pickup, often available the same day or next day. Walmart.com gives you 90 days to return furniture. Costco.com allows returns through their standard satisfaction guarantee, and you can process the return either at a warehouse or through the website. Home Depot and Lowe's both offer buy online, pick up in store (BOPIS), which eliminates shipping delays and lets you inspect before you drive home.

Delivery vs. pickup: what actually makes sense

For smaller items like side tables, chairs, or accent pieces, standard parcel delivery is fine. For large sets, full dining tables, modular sectionals, deep-seating groups, consider in-store or curbside pickup if you have a vehicle that can handle it. Shipping large furniture can add weeks and occasionally results in damage. If damage happens on a delivery, document it with photos immediately and contact the retailer before accepting the shipment, return policies on damaged goods are much easier to navigate when reported at delivery.

Sales timing and when to buy for the biggest discounts

Patio furniture follows a predictable sale cycle, and knowing when to buy versus when to wait can save you 30 to 60 percent off retail. Here's how the year breaks down.

  1. Late winter (February to March): New inventory arrives and retailers run early-season promotions to move product. Selection is at its peak but prices aren't yet marked down. Good time to buy if you want first pick of the season.
  2. Memorial Day (late May): One of the biggest patio furniture sale weekends of the year. Expect 20 to 30 percent off across Home Depot, Lowe's, Wayfair, Walmart, and most big-box retailers. Today — late May 2026 — is right in the middle of this window, so sales are live right now.
  3. Fourth of July: Another major sale event. Similar discounts to Memorial Day. Good for a second pass if you didn't buy in May.
  4. Labor Day (early September): Prices start dropping more aggressively as retailers begin clearing summer inventory. You'll find solid deals but selection is thinner.
  5. End of season (September through October): The best prices of the year — sometimes 50 to 70 percent off. The trade-off is limited selection and you're buying for next year, not this one.
  6. Black Friday and Cyber Monday: Some retailers (especially Wayfair and Amazon) run meaningful patio furniture discounts, though selection of outdoor-specific pieces is smaller than spring/summer.

Right now, in late May, you're at the tail end of Memorial Day sales, check Home Depot, Lowe's, Wayfair, and Walmart's websites today and this weekend. If you don't find exactly what you want at the right price, the Fourth of July sale is about five weeks away and typically offers comparable deals.

Practical comparison checklist: price, materials, cushions, and warranty

Table with a notepad and furniture samples for comparing frame, cushions, materials, and warranty

Before you finalize any purchase, run through this checklist. It takes about five minutes and has saved me from buying furniture I would have regretted more than once.

What to CheckWhat Good Looks LikeRed Flags
Frame materialPowder-coated aluminum, wrought iron, Grade A teak, resin wicker over aluminumUncoated steel, thin tube steel, unspecified 'metal'
Cushion fabricSolution-dyed acrylic, Sunbrella or equivalent, removable coversGeneric polyester, no UV or fade rating listed
Cushion fillQuick-dry foam with drainage, high-density fillThin batting, no drainage, non-removable covers
Joints and hardwareWelded aluminum joints, stainless steel hardwareBolted connections with zinc-plated hardware
Warranty1 year minimum; 3+ years for frames is a good signNo warranty listed, or 'limited' with no specifics
Return policy30 to 90 days (Wayfair 30 days, Walmart/Lowe's 90 days, Costco satisfaction guarantee)Final sale, no returns, or less than 14 days
Price vs. comparableWithin 10–15% of the same item at other retailersSignificantly higher than identical or near-identical items elsewhere
Assembly requirementClear instructions, quality hardware includedVague instructions, mismatched hardware, excessive part count

One thing worth noting: if you're deciding between buying used versus new, the same checklist applies, but you're also checking for rust, frame bends, sun-bleached fabric, and wobbly joints that can't be tightened. Buying used can get you premium furniture at a steep discount, but the inspection step matters more, not less.

Step-by-step: how to find the right set near you and confirm stock and deals

Here's exactly how I'd approach buying patio furniture today if I were starting from scratch. This takes about 30 to 45 minutes and leaves you with a short list of real options at real prices. If you want more help, use this guide to compare where to find patio furniture by store type, budget, and delivery or pickup options.

  1. Set your budget and decide on a material. Know whether you're spending under $300, $300 to $800, or $800 and up — and decide if you want aluminum, resin wicker, wood, or steel. This narrows your field immediately.
  2. Check Home Depot and Lowe's websites first. Both let you filter by 'available today' at your local store. Set your zip code, filter by material, and check the 'pickup today' box. This shows you what you can actually see and take home right now.
  3. Check Costco and Sam's Club if you're a member. Look online at Costco.com and SamsClub.com for current in-stock patio sets. Call your local warehouse to confirm floor availability before making the trip — their online-only inventory sometimes differs from what's on the floor.
  4. Open Wayfair in a second tab and sort by your budget with 'free shipping' checked. Look at customer ratings over 4.2 stars with at least 50 reviews. Read one-star reviews specifically for mentions of rust, broken welds, or color fading — that's where real durability problems surface.
  5. Compare at least two retailers on the same or similar item. Use Google Shopping or just open tabs side by side. A $499 set at one store is often $449 or $529 at another — five minutes of comparison can save $50 or more, or reveal that a slightly higher price comes with a much better warranty.
  6. Check for active sale promotions. Search '[retailer name] patio furniture sale May 2026' to find any current promotional codes or sale landing pages. During Memorial Day weekend, most major retailers have dedicated sale pages — go directly there rather than browsing the full catalog.
  7. Confirm return policy before you buy. Match the return window to your timeline. If you're buying now for a space you haven't fully measured yet, make sure you have at least 30 days to decide. Walmart gives you 90 days; Wayfair gives you 30; Costco's satisfaction guarantee is effectively open-ended for most items.
  8. Place the order or head to the store. If buying online, screenshot or save the order confirmation and any sale pricing. If picking up in-store, call ahead to confirm the floor display matches what's in the system — stock counts aren't always perfectly accurate.

A few things that are outside this guide but worth knowing: if you're specifically hunting for budget-friendly options, inexpensive patio furniture tends to be more available online than in-store, and the quality tiers are broader than you might expect. And if you're open to buying secondhand, the used patio furniture market, Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, and local estate sales, can get you solid mid-range or even premium sets for 40 to 60 percent less than retail, often in barely-used condition after a single season.

Bottom line: if you're buying today, start with Home Depot or Lowe's for in-store availability and solid warranties, Costco or Sam's Club if you want warehouse pricing and the best return policy in the business, and Wayfair if you want the widest online selection with free shipping. If you’re specifically looking for where to buy inexpensive patio furniture, these same retailers and clearance outlets are usually the easiest places to start. Run any option through the quality checklist above, confirm the return policy fits your timeline, and you'll walk away with something you're actually happy with, not just something that was on sale.

FAQ

Where should I buy patio furniture if I need it delivered by a specific date?

Prioritize retailers that publish delivery windows at checkout, then cross-check your cart against pickup or curbside options. For large sets, also factor in assembly time and whether delivery uses white-glove scheduling or standard freight, since delays are more common with modular and deep-seating groups.

What’s the safest way to choose patio furniture online so I don’t get surprises?

Filter first by frame material and cushion fabric, then verify three things in the listing details: replacement-part availability (for cushions, slings, or seat bases), whether assembly is required, and the return policy conditions for “opened,” “used,” or “damaged on arrival.” If the policy is vague, choose a retailer with a clear returns process.

Should I avoid buying “polyester” cushions if I see that in the product description?

Not always, but it is a warning sign when the listing does not mention fade resistance, solution-dyed fibers, or removable washable covers. If it only says “polyester,” look for additional specs such as UV rating, colorfastness, or thickness, and prefer cushions with quick-dry foam or drainage features.

How do I tell if a patio set will actually hold up near the coast or in heavy rain?

Look for aluminum or marine-grade components, powder-coated finishes, and hardware made to resist corrosion (often described as stainless or rust-resistant). Also confirm drainage in cushion design and that covers can be removed to air-dry, because mildew risk rises quickly in humid climates.

What should I check for in-store that I might miss online?

Examine joint quality by pushing and twisting at the corners, inspect welds or fasteners for clean finishes, and measure cushion thickness. Also check that sling fabric is tensioned correctly, since overly loose slings usually loosen faster and feel “stretched” after a few weeks.

Can I mix brands or warranties if I buy pieces from different stores?

Yes, but treat warranties as independent contracts, not a combined set. If you’re building a coordinated patio, make sure the frame and cushion warranties are both valid for your product type, and keep the receipt or order number for each item so you can file claims without delays.

What’s the best way to handle delivery damage when it happens?

Document damage immediately at the time of receipt (photos showing the shipping label and the defect), refuse or partially accept if the box is severely crushed, and notify the retailer before removing packaging. Delays in reporting can lead to “normal wear” explanations, especially for discount or third-party deliveries.

Is buying patio furniture used worth it, and what’s the biggest risk?

It can be a great value, but the main risk is hidden corrosion in frames or sun damage that makes fabrics brittle and less water resistant. Inspect for rust at joints and underside seams, check cushion foam for uneven compression, and test wobbly joints that cannot be tightened.

How do I find patio furniture that’s “good” without paying premium prices?

Target sales windows and search for mid-range frame materials like powder-coated aluminum, then focus spend on cushions and construction details. A practical approach is to prioritize longevity components (frame, hardware, cushion drainage) first, and compromise on aesthetics last if you’re buying clearance.

When should I buy if I miss Memorial Day and want the next best deal?

If late May prices are not matching your target, the next common step is the Fourth of July sales cycle, which typically brings similar discounts. Also watch for post-summer markdowns in early fall, because outdoor-season clearance can hit deeper for display models and discontinued fabrics.

Does membership matter for Costco or Sam’s Club patio furniture purchases?

You need membership to shop, but the bigger advantage is their returns and satisfaction guarantee structure. Since inventory rotates, confirm the exact item, check the warranty terms for that specific listing, and avoid “one-piece” substitutions if you need matching cushions or compatible modular components.

What’s the best approach for measuring my patio before I buy?

Measure the space in two ways: overall footprint and clear walking paths, then confirm door or gate width for delivery and placement. For sets, also measure the seating swing or chair clearance so you don’t end up with chairs that cannot fully pull out for comfortable use.

How can I reduce the chance of ending up with mismatched cushions or replacement issues later?

Before buying, confirm that replacement cushions are available for the exact model and that fabric patterns or colorways can be reordered. Keep product identifiers, and if the set uses detachable cushion covers, verify compatibility across future seasons so you can refresh without replacing the whole frame.