That old wardrobe won’t go through the doorway, the sofa is past its best, and the 1990s kitchen set can’t be rescued — and somehow all of it has to leave the flat. Taking furniture apart looks easy until you actually begin: hidden connectors, back panels glued in place, heavy countertops. We dismantle furniture with care — when it has to make it through a move, or fast — when it’s headed for disposal. We work all over Warsaw, from Praga-Poludnie to Wola.

How much does furniture disassembly cost and what affects the price

The price depends on the kind of furniture, the way it was put together, and whether the parts have to stay in good condition for reassembly. Dismantling a sliding-door wardrobe and taking apart a built-in kitchen are two very different jobs. Standard fixings are included in the price; waste removal and carrying furniture downstairs are billed separately. You’ll find current prices in the table below.

Serviceminmax
Furniture disassembly100 zł250 zł
Furniture rearrangement in apartment 120 zł/h200 zł/h

How furniture disassembly works on site

  1. You explain the job: what needs to be taken apart, how many items there are, and whether any parts must be saved. You send photos.
  2. The technician checks the scope and gives you an approximate price.
  3. We set a date and time — often with same-day or next-day availability.
  4. On site, the technician looks over the furniture and checks what fasteners were used (cam locks, dowels, glue, nails).
  5. Dismantling starts: first doors, shelves, and drawers come off, then the frame. If the furniture is going for disposal — the parts are stacked neatly to save space.
  6. If the furniture needs to be assembled again — parts are marked, hardware is packed into bags, and photos are taken to show the order.
  7. Clean-up: dust, debris, and leftover fixings. Carrying items to the entrance or the bulky waste collection point — by arrangement.

Common mistakes during furniture disassembly (and how to avoid them)

  • Trying to take apart a wardrobe without removing the doors first — the frame loses strength, twists, and tips over.
  • Prying out cam locks with a screwdriver instead of a hex key — the threads get stripped, chipboard splits, and the panel is damaged.
  • Missing hidden wall brackets — yanking a wardrobe that’s fixed to the wall with angle brackets. Result: pieces of plaster torn out.
  • Dismantling built-in furniture without taking photos — then not being able to put it back together in the new place because the sequence is forgotten.
  • Leaving floors and walls unprotected — heavy shelves fall during dismantling, scratching laminate and denting door frames.
  • Smashing furniture instead of dismantling it — then finding out later it could have been sold or donated.
  • Not checking whether the furniture is empty — starting the job with things still inside, and everything spills out.

What to prepare before the technician arrives

  • Empty the furniture fully — remove clothing, dishes, and books.
  • Make sure there’s clear access to the furniture — move other items at least one metre away.
  • Decide beforehand: disposal or reassembly. This changes how carefully the job is done and how long it takes.
  • If the furniture is built-in — check for wall fixings (usually angle brackets at the top or at the back).
  • Prepare a place for storing parts if they’re going with you to the new address.
  • Check bulky waste collection rules in your building — Warsaw has a scheduled gabaryty pickup service.
  • Cover the floor with plastic sheeting or cardboard — small parts always end up dropping during disassembly.
  • Provide building access, intercom code, lift availability, and parking details.
  • If items need to be carried outside — tell us how many floors there are and whether there’s a lift.

A real case from Warsaw

A client in the Zoliborz district was moving out of a three-room flat and wanted to take his IKEA PAX bedroom set with him — two 2.5-metre wardrobes with mirrored doors. The issue was that the wardrobes were tight to the ceiling, the back panels were nailed on, and each mirror door weighed around 15 kg. The technician began by removing the doors — lifting them off the hinges with a special tool so the mirrors stayed safe. After that, he took out the shelves and clothes rails, marking every panel with a marker on painter’s tape. The back panels were eased off carefully without damaging the chipboard. The full disassembly took 2.5 hours. Parts were wrapped in plastic, and the hardware went into labelled bags. In the new flat, the wardrobes were reassembled without any trouble — not one part was missing. The lesson: marking parts during disassembly saves hours when it’s time to put everything back together.

Frequently asked questions

Can furniture be disassembled so it can be put back together?

Yes, if it was put together with cam locks or bolts. Glued and nailed furniture is more difficult to dismantle without damage — the technician will check it on site.

Do you haul away old furniture?

We dismantle and carry it out. Disposal transport is a separate service — we can recommend a hauler. Warsaw also has a free gabaryty collection schedule.

How long does it take to disassemble one wardrobe?

A standard wardrobe takes 30–60 minutes. A built-in sliding-door wardrobe with rails — up to 1.5 hours.

Do I need to be home during the work?

Best if you are — so you can decide what stays and what gets thrown out. But if everything is arranged in advance, you can leave a key.

What to do with bulky waste in Warsaw?

Each district has its own gabaryty collection schedule — furniture is left on the pavement on the assigned day. You can also take it to a PSZOK (selective waste collection point).

Do you disassemble kitchen units?

Yes, including countertops, wall cabinets, and built-in appliances. Disconnecting water and electricity is separate if needed.

Can I book a weekend disassembly?

Yes, we also work on Saturdays. Message or call us — we’ll find a time that suits you.

Who does the work

Furniture disassembly is done by technicians with real hands-on experience in assembling and taking apart cabinet furniture. We handle every kind: IKEA, built-in wardrobes, kitchens, wall units. We work across all of Warsaw and nearby areas. To book — call or message us, and we reply within an hour.