Best Dining Chairs 2024 | The Strategist

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Nov 06, 2024

Best Dining Chairs 2024 | The Strategist

Dining chairs are an easy way to experiment aesthetically, whether you’re looking for a Shaker element or something eye-catching “for when you want to add color but don’t want to spend $3,000 on a red

Dining chairs are an easy way to experiment aesthetically, whether you’re looking for a Shaker element or something eye-catching “for when you want to add color but don’t want to spend $3,000 on a red couch,” as architect Ming Thompson puts it. To surface the best-looking opions (that are durable and, for the most part, budget friendly), we asked over a dozen experts — including design historians, architects, and interior designers — to share their favorites. Below are some thoroughly vetted choices, including a historically significant Viennese café chair with its own Wikipedia page and the startlingly inexpensive, thrice-recommended Article Svelti.

I’m a huge chair-design nerd, and although there’s a soft place in my heart for avant-garde or zany models, I also believe that the best dining chair is one you enjoy sitting in and doesn’t rush you to move somewhere comfier once you’re done with your meal. Of course, a lot of chairs fit those criteria, from exemplars of pure “chairness,” a quality that design historian Charlotte Fiell defines as “how a kid would draw a chair,” to modern squiggles molded to fit your body. One way to narrow the criteria is by considering an item’s visual footprint. Translucent plastic, panels made from wicker or caning, or thin wooden spindles make for a lighter silhouette, better for small spaces, while a solid back, upholstery, or wide legs are more visually dominant.

I also considered how a style complements other furniture — either through resemblance or contrast. Lightweight, industrial chairs might have a similar silhouette to metal furniture; if you’re buying wooden chairs, you may want the finish to match other wood furniture in your home. Still, there’s no need to overthink it: if the main thing your chairs have in common is that you love them, that’s also a great design scheme.

Update on August 15, 2024: Added the Blu Dot Chair Chair; updated prices and checked stock for all other products.

In general, dining chairs are made of materials that make them comfortable and solid enough to sit in for hours but lightweight enough that you won’t gouge your floor as you move them around. Most options on our list are made of wood, steel, plastic, or a combination of the three. For a plastic chair, UV resistance is a useful feature; it will prevent it from fading in the sun — something to which even indoor chairs are susceptible.

In most cases, you’ll be buying multiples of a dining chair (although some of the experts we spoke to, like The Little Book of Living Small author Laura Fenton, recommend mixing and matching). It’s easiest to start with how many chairs you need and your budget: If you’re trying to fill out a six-seater table, you may want something less expensive, or if you’re rounding out a set you already own, you can splurge on something design-y. We’ve sorted the list by price into four tiers, all per chair: below $150 ($), below $250 ($$), below $400 ($$$), and above $400 ($$$$).

My favorite way to save money on dining chairs is to buy vintage, which Charlotte and Peter Fiell (co-authors of Chairs: 1,000 Masterpieces of Modern Design, 1800 to Present Day and Modern Chairs) recommend as a way to “get more for your money.” A good rule of thumb is to search for a design or style that has been continuously produced for many years — like a Parsons chair or Marcel Breuer’s Cesca chair — and set alerts on eBay, your local Craigslist or Facebook Marketplace, and resale sites like Chairish and 1stdibs. Listings for popular styles come up fairly frequently, giving you a choice of vendors in your area, and they’ll still be around years later if you need to add more to your set. (Some popular vintage chairs are still in production, but buying vintage is usually a better deal.) It is harder to find a pristine vintage chair, but if you don’t mind some signs of wear or doing a light cleaning yourself, it can expand your range of affordable options.

Material: UV-resistant polypropylene | Price: $

The Article Svelti is a Goldilocks chair, with several just-right qualities that suit anyone — elegant design, lightweight yet sturdy legs, a durable, wipeable material, and an affordable price point. Multiple experts recommended it, all for different reasons. The plastic construction is durable and “absolutely kidproof,” according to Hunker editorial director Leonora Epstein, and reports that it’s highly versatile — she uses a version of the Svelti as a desk chair. Thompson likes that the chair comes in “great colors that are really matte” — like the bright orange you see in a lot of mid-century décor and a cool aloe green — useful for buyers who want to add a trendy shade to their home but don’t want to commit to a larger or more expensive piece in a non-neutral color.

The Svelit also durable enough to last you for years and years. I’ve seen them at tons of restaurants and cafés, an indicator that they’re hard-wearing enough for professional use. They’re also made of UV-resistant plastic, so resist fading in the sun whether indoors or out. Strategist writer Emma Wartzman used them as dining chairs for two years before moving them to the backyard, and attests that “they’ve held up great. No signs of wear and tear at all,” she says.

Material: Pine | Price: $

For an even less expensive chair, the Ikea Ivar is a classic. Writer Laura Fenton recommends them as “a great affordable option” “has been in the catalogue as long as I can remember” (a helpful quality if you might add to the set later). For a basic wooden chair, Fenton says that it’s surprisingly versatile: “The lines are really simple and clean, so they can skew more modern, traditional, or country.” Plus the unfinished pine is easy to customize. “You can paint or stain them to the color that suits your décor and easily refinish them later if your tastes change or you pass them on to someone else,” she says.

Material: UV-resistant polypropylene | Price: $

Despite being made of plastic, Hay’s Elementaire chair is “comfy, not hard on your back, and designed to be used all day, not just to look nice in a corner of your living room,” says Antoine Pons, owner of Momentum Design Store. He also appreciates the price: “It’s an affordable way to own a collectible from great designers” — brothers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, who ended their creative partnership last year.

Material: Polycarbonate plastic, chrome-plated steel | Price: $

Former Strategist writer Leah Muncy owns two of these “extraordinarily comfortable,” wobble-free Ikea plastic cantilevered chairs. They accent four rattan chairs around her six-seater table, but the Tobias chairs are so much more comfortable that “my roommate and I only sit in the [Ikea] ones,” Muncy says, one of the qualities I look for in a good dining chair. Strategist contributor and furniture reseller Billy Domineau also includes the chair on his list of ten Ikea pieces that are made to last: “It’s durable, versatile, and surprisingly comfortable,” he says.

Material: Bent plywood, chrome-plated steel legs | Price: $$

I found out about these chairs from my friend Ryan Glassman, a musician and software engineer, who bought a set for his apartment over a year ago. He loves their construction: a bent plywood seat and an H-shaped steel frame. “They punch above their weight in terms of cost versus build quality,” he says. “It’s no easy feat to make a chair with this kind of a shape and this kind of a frame feel sturdy at this price point.” The chairs are also stackable, a useful feature for small spaces.

Material: Cotton velvet, hardwood frame, brass legs | Price: $$$

For something soft and plush but still durable enough for dinnertime, these Anthropologie velvet chairs have the unusual endorsement of being “rabbitproof,” per Biggs. She uses them around a breakfast table in the room where she keeps two free-roaming pet rabbits. The velvet is “really plush,” she says, but its dense weave makes it tough enough to withstand animal-related wear and tear. (I’ve noticed the same effect with cats who treat every bit of upholstery as a scratching post — the density of a velvet weave just doesn’t interest them.) Fur brushes right off — “I don’t even need to use the lint roller,” she says — and the bales of hay that Biggs stores near the chairs don’t damage the fabric.

Material: Wood, cane | Price: $$

Interior designer Charlie Hellstern discovered this woven cane-backed restaurant chair while searching for an affordable, nonplastic dining chair for a client. Several experts we spoke to caveated their love of cane furniture by mentioning its susceptibility to damage, but choosing a chair made to stand up to restaurant-tier wear and tear like this one is a “good way to ensure durability,” Hellstern says. “Caning is one of the most ancient techniques, and I love how classic the look is with black-stained wood.”

Material: Steel, plywood | Price: $

I bought four of these steel-framed, plywood French school chairs while searching for a dining chair under $100 (they fit the criteria if you buy from Etsy), and they’ve become one of my favorite home purchases. The chairs are quite sturdy, easy to clean, and comfortable — they’re effectively my working-from-home office chairs, too, and I haven’t noticed any back or neck pain from sitting in them for hours at a time. And although they’re school chairs, they’re proportioned for adults, with a seat that’s 18 inches above the ground and approximately 15 inches wide, depending on the model — roughly the same dimensions as the Ikea Ivar chair. (There’s also a style with an extra-wide seat you can find on vintage marketplaces.)

Although the Mullca chairs are vintage and no longer available new, they were mass-produced in their prime and are easy to find in a wide range of styles, colors, and finishes on resale sites like Etsy, 1stdibs, and Chairish. If you’re trying to match a specific color you can’t find online, spray-painting the steel components would be a quick DIY workaround. I’m not their only fan — Dimes Square bar Le Dive has a bunch of them with cherry-red frames.

Material: Beech, molded plywood | Price: $$

This spindle-backed Windsor chair, manufactured by historic Czech chair company Ton (founded by Austrian furniture-maker Michael Thonet), is recommended by Fenton. “Often, when chairs get smaller, they become less comfortable, but this one supports you, even though the square footage it takes up is very small,” she says. The chair’s timeless design works in a variety of settings, “which is a good thing for people in a small space who may move to a larger space later.”

Material: Polypropylene or wood, steel frame | Price: $

For a dining-chair set you can bring out for a group and fold away into the thinnest stack possible when you’re not hosting, Fenton recommends these chairs from Armett, which collapse “extremely slimly” compared to similar models, down to less than an inch in width. The design is “nice enough that you wouldn’t be sad to sit on it every day,” especially in cheery colors like tomato red and petrol blue.

Material: Polycarbonate | Price: $$$

Two of our experts praised Kartell’s Ghost series of translucent plastic chairs, created by French industrial designer Philippe Starck in the early aughts. They’re especially good for avoiding visual clutter in small spaces: Design editor Caroline Biggs has seen them around a table with six dining chairs, and says that the plastic fabrication is “so transparent and streamlined” that a full set makes a space “feel airy, which is not typical in a room with six dining chairs stuffed at a table.” (Plus, she reports that they’re surprisingly comfortable.)

Material: Beech | Price: $$$

First produced in 1859 by Thonet, this classic chair, which became popular in Viennese coffeehouses, is known for being unexpectedly durable despite its delicate and light silhouette. “Every black-box comedy theater has that chair on the stage,” says designer Michael Yarinsky. “You can throw them around and they bounce off the floor. They never break.” Supporting Yarinsky’s thesis, a version of the chair — the No. 18 chair, below, which has a bentwood loop that connects from the back to the seat — appeared in the TV show Westworld, starring in a climactic fight scene. The chairs are expensive new, but they’re easy to find on resale sites like Chairish or eBay for $100 to $200. (Search for both “Ton” and “Thonet” — there are three active companies descended from the original Thonet brand, and the Czech company Ton is the easiest to find in the U.S.)

Material: Polypropylene, steel | Price: $$–$$$$

One of the most imitated plastic-chair designs, the Eames molded chair, was first introduced as an entry in a MoMA low-cost furniture competition in 1948. It’s a favorite of Tyler Watamanuk, author of chair-centric newsletter Sitting Pretty, who has sought out the chairs since buying a knockoff that quickly fell apart in his mid-20s. Compared with other historic chairs, its customizable range of materials, finishes, and heights is “seemingly endless.” Maddie Bailis, manager of new product and merchandising at Alex Mill, is a devotee of Eames side chairs. She owns a vinyl-upholstered pair that she rescued from a renovation of her family’s synagogue in a Philadelphia suburb as a 10-year-old; she reports that they’re still in good shape.

Material: Veneer shell, chrome-plated or powder-coated steel frame | Price: $$$$

Originally developed for kitchens and canteens, the Series 7 chair is an “absolute icon of Scandinavian design,” according to Charlotte Fiell. Fiell owns a set from the early 1960s and says that “they look good with more use” — especially in the wood veneer finishes, which take on a beautiful patina as they age. Fiell likes that the chairs come in plenty of colors, stack for easy storage, and have a friendly design with “a curved seat that looks like a smile.”

Material: Wooden frame, paper-cord seat | Price: $$$$

Several of our experts recommended the Wishbone as their holy-grail chair, and after sitting in it myself, I agree. The wide seat and curved armrest feel solid and supportive despite their lightweight silhouette, a sign of craftsmanship. Thompson, who has had her set of Wishbone chairs for more than a decade, enjoys their design history — Hans Wegner designed the chair in 1949 as part of a series based on portraits of Danish merchants sitting in Ming-dynasty chairs, and “I love that there’s the Scandinavian purity but also the decorative, beautiful back that refers back to classical Chinese furniture,” she says. She adds that the chairs are durable enough for a family with kids — albeit with a cushion added to protect the paper-cord seat. Her kids will spill “a whole bowl of spaghetti and meatballs on the chair,” she says, and the chairs have been just fine.

Material: Walnut, maple, oak, or poplar | Price: $$$$

For a handmade chair that can stand up to larger spaces, Hellstern recommends the Hanko chair by Seattle company Chadhaus. “Some of the homes that are really hot right now are mid-century modern ones with big open spaces and big, wide, open windows … In a space like that, furniture needs to have its own visual weight,” says Hellstern. She recommends Chadhaus for quality craftsmanship and design — particularly this chair’s contoured backrest and seat and non-“wispy” legs. And although it’s a splurge, Hellstern says it’s a fair price for handmade furniture that will last. “I would rather buy one chair every four years — or whatever is my budget — to get a chair that’s going to be with me forever that I love.”

• Diana Budds, senior story producer at Curbed• Maddie Bailis, manager of new product and merchandising at Alex Mill• Sophie Collé, furniture designer• Leonora Epstein, senior content director at Hunker• Laura Fenton, author of The Little Book of Living Small• Charlotte Fiell, co-author of Chairs: 1,000 Masterpieces of Modern Design, 1800 to Present Day and Modern Chairs• Peter Fiell, co-author of Chairs: 1,000 Masterpieces of Modern Design, 1800 to Present Day and Modern Chairs• Charlie Hellstern, interior designer• Julia Noran Johnston, founder and president of Business of Home• Leah Muncy, former Strategist writer• Caitlin Murray, founder and principal designer at Black Lacquer Design• Antoine Pons, founder of Momentum Design Store• Aran Simi, vintage dealer• Rachel Tashjian, Harper’s Bazaar fashion news director• Ming Thompson, architect at Atelier Cho Thompson• Emma Wartzman, Strategist writer• Tyler Watamanuk, author of Sitting Pretty newsletter• Michael Yarinsky, co-founder of Office of Tangible Space

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