That new sofa smell. The sharp scent of fresh paint. The smell of a newly laid floor. Most people associate these with excitement, a renovation complete, a room refreshed, a home that finally feels new.
What they rarely associate them with is air pollution.
This is off-gassing, the process by which new materials release volatile organic compounds into the air around them. The Royal Institute of British Architects notes that building materials, flooring, paints, adhesives, and furniture can release toxic gases through this process for anywhere from 72 hours to over 20 years. It is largely invisible, often odourless at low levels, and it can continue long after the initial smell has faded. Spring, the peak season for renovations and new furniture purchases across Europe, is when homes become most quietly saturated with it. Most households have no active means of removing these compounds from the air.
What is actually in the air
The most significant compound released through off-gassing is formaldehyde. It is present in the resins that bind MDF, particleboard, and chipboard, the materials at the core of most flat-pack furniture sold across Europe. It is found in carpet adhesives, vinyl flooring, and a wide range of paint formulations. The UK Health Security Agency classifies formaldehyde as both an irritant and a carcinogen. A peer-reviewed study across 17 EU member states, published in Scientific Reports, found that formaldehyde poses an increased risk of respiratory and carcinogenic effects in buildings in 14 of the countries assessed, with furniture, building materials, and cleaning products identified as primary sources.
Formaldehyde is not the only concern. Other VOCs commonly released by new household materials include benzene, toluene, xylene, and acetaldehyde. Taken together, these compounds represent a significant and largely unmonitored source of indoor air pollution in European homes. Unlike particulate matter, they cannot be removed by ventilation alone or by standard air purifiers without a dedicated gas filtration layer.
The scale of the problem in European homes
The same peer-reviewed research found that VOC concentrations in homes, schools, and offices across Europe are typically 2 to 5 times higher than outdoor levels, with building materials, furniture, adhesives, and cleaning products identified as the primary sources.
Most people living with elevated chemical exposure in their homes are entirely unaware it is happening. The sources are familiar and the levels are invisible.
This is not a niche problem. It peaks in spring and early summer when renovation activity increases, new furniture purchases rise, and the temptation to seal windows to keep out pollen works against the ventilation needed to clear VOC build-up.
How long does it last?
Longer than most people expect.
Standard emulsion paints release VOCs actively for the first 72 hours after application but can continue at lower levels for weeks. Oil-based paints are considerably worse. New flooring such as laminate, vinyl, and engineered wood can off-gas heavily for the first few days after installation, with some emissions persisting for months. Furniture made from MDF or particleboard can continue releasing formaldehyde for years, not weeks.
The initial smell is the most obvious sign, but it is also the least reliable indicator. VOC concentrations can remain elevated long after the smell has gone, and many of the most harmful compounds have no detectable odour at the levels typically found indoors. This is precisely why short-term ventilation, while helpful, is not sufficient on its own. A room that smells clean is not necessarily free of VOCs, and without active filtration, exposure continues around the clock.
Why spring makes it worse
Renovation activity peaks in spring. New furniture purchases climb. Temperatures rise, which accelerates off-gassing and pushes emission rates higher. And yet the instinct is often to keep windows closed, to manage pollen, maintain warmth on cooler spring days, or simply to protect a freshly decorated room from outdoor dust. The result is that newly introduced VOCs from furniture, paint, and flooring accumulate in sealed rooms with nowhere to go, at precisely the moment most people feel their home should be at its freshest.
Who is most affected
VOC exposure at typical indoor concentrations affects most people to some degree, but certain groups face greater risk.

Children are particularly vulnerable. Their lungs and immune systems are still developing, they breathe more air relative to their body weight than adults, and they spend more time close to the floor where VOC concentrations tend to be highest. The same study confirmed that formaldehyde exposure poses respiratory and carcinogenic risks to children in educational buildings across 14 European countries, with children’s higher inhalation rates and developing immune systems making them particularly susceptible.
People with existing asthma or respiratory conditions, pregnant women, and older adults all face heightened sensitivity to formaldehyde and other VOCs at concentrations routinely found in newly decorated or furnished homes. For these groups in particular, relying on ventilation alone during and after a renovation is unlikely to provide adequate protection.
What you can actually do
You cannot eliminate off-gassing entirely, but you can significantly reduce your exposure with a few straightforward steps.
- Ventilate aggressively in the first 72 hours. This is when off-gassing is at its most intense. Open windows on opposite sides of the room to create cross-ventilation. Keep the door to the rest of the home closed so VOCs do not spread to other rooms.
- Do not seal a newly decorated room. The instinct to close everything up and let paint dry is counterproductive. The faster VOCs can escape, the better.
- Choose lower-emission products where possible. Look for paints, flooring, and furniture certified to low-emission standards. The range of low-VOC options in the European market has improved considerably in recent years.
- Unwrap and air new furniture before bringing it indoors. Leaving a new sofa or flatpack unit outside or in a garage for a few days allows the initial burst of off-gassing to dissipate outside rather than inside your home.
- Do not rely on ventilation alone for ongoing protection. Opening windows helps clear VOCs in the short term, but it is not a continuous solution, particularly in urban areas where outdoor air quality has its own problems, or during cooler months when ventilating is impractical. An air purifier with a dedicated carbon filtration layer provides continuous protection, removing VOCs from the air as they are released, around the clock, regardless of the season.
The steps above address the initial and most intense phase of off-gassing. But the compounds released by new furniture and paint do not stop at 72 hours. Many persist for months. A newly decorated or refurnished home needs a permanent layer of active filtration, one that works continuously in the background, capturing both the gases and the particles that off-gassing produces, long after the smell has gone and the windows have been closed for winter. That is precisely what a purpose-built air purifier provides, and why the choice of purifier matters as much as the decision to use one at all.
How AmazingAir helps
Most air purifiers are designed with particles in mind. Off-gassing is a different problem entirely. The compounds released by new furniture, fresh paint, and newly laid floors are gases, and gases pass straight through a particle filter without being captured at all. Addressing off-gassing properly requires a system built for both sides of the problem, and that is exactly what AmazingAir is designed to do.

A filter built for what off-gassing actually produces
The Carbon/Gas Trap/VOC filter is the layer that makes the real difference here. As air passes through it, formaldehyde, benzene, toluene, and other volatile organic compounds are absorbed and neutralised at a molecular level through adsorption, binding the compounds within the carbon rather than simply moving them around the room. This is not the same as masking an odour. The compounds are removed from the air entirely.
The quality of that carbon layer matters enormously. Many budget purifiers include a thin sheet of activated carbon, often containing too little material to meaningfully reduce VOC concentrations over time. AmazingAir’s Carbon/Gas Trap/VOC filter contains significantly more high-quality activated carbon, and crucially, is paired with high-performance fans that pull sufficient air through the filter to allow proper adsorption. Without that airflow, even good filter material cannot perform. AmazingAir is independently certified for the compounds it removes, which means the performance has been verified, not simply claimed.
The particle side of off-gassing
New flooring adhesives, carpet fibres, and certain paint formulations also release ultrafine particles alongside gases during the off-gassing period. AmazingAir’s UltraHEPA™ filter captures particles down to 0.003 microns, 100 times smaller than the standard HEPA threshold of 0.3 microns. A fully sealed casing ensures every volume of air drawn through the unit passes through all stages of filtration, with no unfiltered air escaping around the edges.
Automatic protection from the moment you open the box
VOC levels in a newly decorated or refurnished room do not rise at predictable times. They peak when temperatures climb, when a newly delivered sofa off-gasses its first burst, or when paint on a recently finished wall releases a surge of compounds overnight. AmazingAir’s built-in air quality sensor detects these changes in real time and responds automatically, increasing fan speed when concentrations rise and stepping back down once the air returns to normal. The colour-coded ring lets you see exactly what is happening at a glance without needing to check an app or adjust any settings. The optional ioniser helps bring ultrafine particles together so the filter can capture them more easily, producing just 0.001 ppm of ozone in the process, well within safe limits.
The AmazingAir 2000 covers rooms up to 113 m² and the AmazingAir 3500 covers up to 225 m². Both are independently CADR-tested by Intertek laboratories.
The smell goes. The compounds do not.
A freshly decorated room smells clean. A brand-new sofa smells of quality. A just-laid floor smells of newness. None of these smells last more than a few days. But the VOCs producing them, and the ones that have no smell at all, can remain in your indoor air for months.
As established, indoor VOC levels are consistently higher than outdoor levels, driven by the materials and furnishings that make a home feel new. Most people exposed to this remain entirely unaware of it.
Understanding off-gassing does not mean avoiding new things. It means knowing that the period immediately after a renovation or new purchase is when your indoor air needs the most attention, and acting accordingly.
AmazingAir is designed for exactly this kind of ongoing, invisible protection.
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