At Home, the Texas-based home goods retailer with locations across the Southeast, operates a store in Chattanooga that serves as one option among several for shoppers furnishing apartments, houses, or rental properties in the area. This guide covers what you'll find there, how it compares to competing retailers in town, and what to expect based on the store's format and inventory model.
At Home operates a single store in Chattanooga at 7050 Lee Highway in the East Brainerd area, roughly 15 minutes from downtown. The chain positions itself as a warehouse-style home décor and furniture retailer, stocking everything from living room sectionals and bedroom sets to kitchen textiles, wall art, seasonal decorations, and outdoor furniture. The store spans roughly 120,000 square feet, which means inventory runs deep but also means you'll need time to navigate it.
Parking is abundant, which matters when you're buying large items. Unlike smaller specialty shops, At Home assumes customers will make substantial purchases and haul them home themselves or arrange delivery. The store does offer white-glove delivery on furniture, though this service carries additional fees that vary by item.
Hours typically run 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays and Saturdays, with Sunday hours from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. (verify before visiting, as holiday schedules shift). The store accepts standard payment methods and maintains a return window of 90 days on most items, which is more forgiving than many furniture retailers but shorter than At Home's online policy.
At Home's Chattanooga location stocks residential furniture, accent tables, bedroom collections, and modular seating in-store. The brand caters to renters and homeowners with moderate to budget-friendly price points, typically ranging from $200 to $1,500 for sofas and $400 to $2,000 for bedroom sets. This positions the chain squarely between discount mass-market retailers and higher-end furniture showrooms.
The décor selection emphasizes seasonal merchandise and trend-driven items. Spring through early summer brings heavy rotation of outdoor furniture, fire pit accessories, and patio décor. Fall months introduce home accents in warm tones, harvest-themed tablescapes, and holiday lighting. Winter stock includes Christmas decorations and cold-weather textiles. This rotation model means inventory changes materially every 4 to 6 weeks, so if you see something you like, purchasing within a week or two is usually safer than waiting.
The store also carries kitchen textiles, bedding, wall art, mirrors, lighting fixtures, and home organization products. At Home does not typically stock appliances or plumbing fixtures; if you're furnishing a kitchen or bathroom completely, you'll need to source those elsewhere.
Chattanooga has several competing retail channels for home furnishings. Wayfair operates no physical location in Chattanooga, so online shopping with pickup or delivery is the only option there. IKEA's nearest store is in Atlanta, about 2 hours away, making it impractical for same-day shopping.
Locally, HomeGoods and TJ Maxx locations in Chattanooga (including one in the North Shore area and another near Hixson) offer curated, rotational home décor and some small furnishings at discount prices. These stores excel at finding deals on throw pillows, wall art, seasonal items, and kitchen accessories but stock minimal furniture. Prices are often lower than At Home, but selection is intentionally limited and unpredictable.
Pottery Barn and similar mid-market chains have no locations in Chattanooga proper, though outlet versions exist in nearby Pigeon Forge. At Home's advantage over HomeGoods and TJ Maxx is depth of seating and bedroom furniture under one roof. Its disadvantage versus those stores is that At Home's prices are rarely deeply discounted; you're paying standard retail for in-stock convenience rather than hunting for deals.
For locally owned options, Chattanooga's antique and vintage furniture shops along Frazier Avenue near the Fort Wood area offer character pieces and one-offs, though prices are highly variable and inventory is sparse. These shops suit people seeking singular statement pieces rather than complete room setups.
For immediate, smaller purchases (throw blankets, pillows, wall décor under $50), HomeGoods wins on price and surprise factor. For furnishing an entire living room or bedroom at once with assured availability and modest pricing, At Home is more practical.
If you're moving to Chattanooga and need to furnish an apartment quickly, At Home's warehouse stock and delivery options make it efficient. Budget 2 to 3 hours for browsing and deciding on a major purchase like a sofa; the store is large and not intuitive in layout. Bring measurements of your spaces; At Home does not provide in-home design consultation the way higher-end showrooms do.
The 90-day return window matters if you're uncertain about color or scale. At Home allows returns on most items without restocking fees, though delivery charges are non-refundable. Keep your receipt and original packaging if you think there's any chance you'll return something.
For seasonal purchases (patio sets in May, holiday décor in September), shopping in-season at At Home is usually cheaper than buying closeout items the following season online, because the retailer stocks heavily and marks items down only moderately as seasons turn.
Delivery scheduling runs 1 to 2 weeks out during peak seasons (spring and fall), so if you need furniture by a specific date, order early. White-glove delivery (assembly, placement, and debris removal) typically costs $100 to $300 per order depending on item size, making it practical for large sofas but less so for smaller pieces.
The store's location on Lee Highway makes it accessible from most Chattanooga neighborhoods, though East Brainerd traffic can be heavy during afternoon commute hours. Shopping mid-morning or early evening avoids the worst congestion.
