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Resources >> Articles >> Understanding the Updated BIFMA LEVEL® e3 Sustainability Standard for Furniture (e3-2024)

Understanding the Updated BIFMA LEVEL® e3 Sustainability Standard for Furniture (e3-2024) | Eurofins Softlines & Hardlines

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First published: March 2026

 

Global research shows consumers are willing to pay around 9.7% more for sustainably produced or sourced goods. In a market where sustainability is increasingly a baseline expectation, the revised BIFMA LEVEL e3-2024 standard offers clearer pathways for responsible design, verified performance and buyer confidence.

This article explains the updated BIFMA LEVEL® e3 Sustainability Standard for Furniture (e3-2024) and explores how furniture brands and manufacturers can leverage this furniture sustainability standard and certification to demonstrate their sustainability commitment.

If you are looking for BIFMA LEVEL® e3 testing and certification services, contact us here directly.

 

 

What is BIFMA LEVEL® e3?

Before diving into more details, it is important to distinguish between the standard and the certification:

  • ANSI/BIFMA e3 is the standard itself. It is a voluntary, consensus-based document maintained through the ANSI process and updated at least every five years. Organisations may claim e3 conformance through first-, second-, or third-party assessment.
  • LEVEL® is BIFMA's official third-party certification programme. It requires verification by an approved certification body and results in a public registry listing at level.bifma.org. Certifications are valid for three years. 

Together, BIFMA LEVEL® e3 provides manufacturers with a transparent route to verified BIFMA compliance and specifiers with a reliable way to compare sustainability claims. The 2024 edition (e3-2024 standard), approved by ANSI on 21 April 2025, is the sixth revision since the standard was first published in 2008 and introduces the most significant structural changes to date. The transition period is in effect until 21 April 2026. After this date, certifications must follow the e3-2024 standard.

 

 

What changed in e3-2024 revision (BIFMA LEVEL® e3)?

Understanding the changes to the furniture sustainability BIFMA e3-2024 vs e3-2019 is essential for manufacturers preparing for certification under the updated framework. Here are the major changes:

New tier structure and LEVEL 4

The 2024 edition replaces the previous credit-based system with minimum requirements at each tier (LEVEL 1 to LEVEL 4), building logically from foundational policies and inventories through assessments and into optimisation. The four tiers are LEVEL 1 (Bronze), LEVEL 2 (Silver), LEVEL 3 (Gold), and the new LEVEL 4 (Platinum).

The newly introduced LEVEL 4 sets an elite benchmark: qualifying products must demonstrate a verified "carbon handprint" exceeding the product's cradle-to-gate carbon footprint, optimised chemistry, advanced chemical disclosure, and supply-chain site audits. Not all product categories will qualify for LEVEL 4. The eligibility depends on the product's material composition and environmental profile.

Alignment with LEED®, WELL™, and ILFI®

The standard explicitly maintains alignment with LEED®, WELL™ and ILFI®, making it easier for specifiers to map product documentation to building certification pathways.

Material health and VOC emissions updates

The revision preserves the low-emitting furniture requirements in Section 7.6, referencing ANSI/BIFMA X7.1 concentration limits and test data generated via M7.1 chamber methods. Notably, e3-2024 adds four target compounds: MTBE, carbon tetrachloride, 1,1-dichloroethylene, and isophorone. 

It also adjusts several limits to align with the CDPH v1.2 CREL list. The standard also removes its proprietary Annex B chemical lists in favour of established external frameworks, adopting the Living Building Challenge Red List and Cradle to Cradle Certified Restricted Substance List instead, which can reduce duplication for manufacturers already tracking those lists.

This reinforces the importance of furniture VOC emission testing as part of the certification process.

Circularity, supply chain responsibility and social criteria

Higher tiers now place more explicit attention on end-of-life design, take-back and extended producer responsibility, and recyclability. 

On the supply-chain side, a supplier assessment is triggered when a component or assembly constituting 40% or more of a product's weight is transformed outside the applicant's organisational boundary (raw materials such as particleboard, glass, and counterweights are exempt). Section 8 expands social-responsibility criteria to emphasise employee well-being, inclusiveness, and community engagement, alongside existing requirements for worker health and safety and ethical labour.

Refinements in key areas

Criteria updates span material health, water stewardship, responsible packaging, and options for positive climate impact at higher tiers.

 

 

Transition timeline for the updated BIFMA LEVEL® e3 (e3-2024)

The transition period runs for 12 months from the date of publication on 21 April 2025:

  • Until 21 April 2026: Both new applicants and existing certificate holders may certify or recertify under either the 2019 or 2024 edition.
  • From 22 April 2026: Only the e3-2024 standard is accepted. All audits and approvals must be completed before the relevant deadline. Mixing criteria between versions is not permitted.

 

 

What should manufacturers do now for the updated BIFMA LEVEL® e3 (e3-2024)?

  • Structured gap analysis: Map current organisational, facility, and product practices against e3-2024 tier minimums. Prioritise material-health inventory, packaging, water stewardship, and supplier oversight.
  • VOC and chemical planning: Define a strategy for furniture VOC emission testing aligned with M7.1/X7.1 and e3 Section 7.6, and prepare material-health documentation to meet higher-tier expectations.
  • Supplier diligence: Identify components meeting the 40% weight-transformation threshold and standardise data capture for supplier assessments.
  • Certification and timeline management: Engage an approved third-party certification body, build a recertification calendar, and ensure all audit milestones are completed by the 21 April 2026 deadline.

 

 

How can Eurofins Softlines & Hardlines help in BIFMA LEVEL® e3 Sustainability standard testing and getting the LEVEL® certification?

BIFMA e3 and LEVEL® certification involves coordinating emissions testing, chemical analysis, mechanical validation, supply-chain mapping, and audit documentation. They often cross multiple sites and suppliers. Eurofins Softlines & Hardlines offers an integrated BIFMA third-party furniture testing service designed to simplify this process.

Emissions & chemical safety testing

  • Accredited VOC testing and formaldehyde emission testing using M7.1 / ANSI‑BIFMA X7.1 and other international methods, ensuring healthier indoor air and compliance with e3 Section 7.6.
  • Comprehensive chemical analysis, including testing for phthalates, heavy metals, PFAS, Chrome VI, and other restricted substances per RSL/MRSL requirements using Eurofins Chem-ST(™) Chemical Smart Testing

Mechanical, durability & flammability Testing

  • End‑to‑end performance testing: Mechanical load, impact, fatigue, stability, and wear resistance to confirm adherence to BIFMA, EN, ISO, ASTM, and relevant standards.
  • Flammability testing (e.g., TB117, BS 5852, EN 1021) for upholstery, mattress, and filled-furniture compliance. 

Supply chain traceability & social compliance

  • Supply chain mapping and risk assessment, tracking materials and manufactured components through multiple tiers to ensure transparency and identify ESG risks. 
  • Origin ID™ cotton origin verification (SIRA‑based), enabling certified confirmation of cotton provenance to support responsible sourcing, which is essential for e3 requirements. 
  • Leather supply chain services, including audits against the Leather Working Group ESG protocol, traceability, chemical management and material certifications. 

Sustainability assessments & lifecycle analysis

  • Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) services to evaluate the environmental footprint from raw materials through end‑of‑life. 
  • Biodegradability and disintegration testing to support materials recycling claims and closed‑loop design. 
  • Green chemistry and sustainability strategy consulting, including PFAS management, RSL/MRSL development, biobased material evaluation, and sustainability claim validation.

Audit‑ready documentation & LEVEL® support

  • Gap analysis and conformance coaching aligned to e3‑2024 tier minimums and the LEVEL® framework.
  • Preparation of robust audit dossiers, including test reports, supplier audits, and sustainability evidence, for submission to approved certification bodies.
  • Ongoing support for recertification and alignment to LEED/WELL/ILFI requirements across furniture product lines.

 

Ready to navigate e3-2024 with confidence? Contact us to discuss your product portfolio and the fastest route to LEVEL® certification. We’ll map your testing plan, identify documentation gaps, and build a supplier assessment roadmap aligned to BIFMA’s requirements.