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IKEA
Inter IKEA Systems B.V
Rating 4.7star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
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4.5

One-line summary I’d recommend the IKEA app for its genuinely excellent search, list-building, and in-store shopping flow, but I’d hesitate if you need flawless wishlist management or a richer account history.

  • Installs

    10M+

  • Developer

    Inter IKEA Systems B.V

  • Category

    Shopping

  • Content Rating

    Everyone

  • Latest version

    4.25.1

  • Package

    com.ingka.ikea.app

In-depth review
The IKEA app gets something important right from the first few minutes: it feels designed to help you complete a shopping mission, not trap you in a maze of promotional clutter. That may sound like a low bar, but in retail apps it really isn’t. After spending time browsing furniture, building lists, checking store availability, and using the app as a companion for in-store shopping, my overall impression is that IKEA has built one of the better big-brand shopping apps on Android. What stands out immediately is how calm the experience feels. The interface is clean, modern, and surprisingly restrained. There is plenty to browse, but the app rarely feels noisy. Product discovery is easy whether you already know what you want or you are wandering through ideas for a room refresh. Search is especially strong. I had very little trouble pulling up specific categories, narrowing down options, and getting to a usable product page quickly. That matters more here than in many shopping apps because IKEA’s catalog is broad, often modular, and easy to get lost in if navigation isn’t sharp. On that front, the app does a good job of keeping the process intuitive. The second major win is that the app works well as both a couch-shopping tool and an actual store companion. That dual role is harder to pull off than it looks. At home, it is convenient for browsing, checking whether something is available, and saving ideas for later. In the store, the experience becomes more practical. Features like scanning items and moving through checkout more efficiently make the app feel useful in a very concrete way, not just like a miniature version of the website. During my testing, this gave the app a sense of purpose that many retail apps never achieve. It genuinely helped bridge the gap between digital planning and physical shopping. Lists are another part of the app that I kept coming back to. IKEA furniture shopping often involves comparisons, room planning, and the slow accumulation of maybes before you commit to a purchase. Being able to save products into lists makes that process much easier. For larger shopping trips, the app can become a running notebook: items you want now, items you are considering later, and items tied to a particular room or project. That kind of organization fits IKEA’s shopping style perfectly. Performance is mostly solid too. In regular use, the app generally feels smooth, with pages loading predictably and navigation staying responsive. I didn’t run into the kind of constant freezing or messy transitions that make some major retail apps feel like overbuilt websites stuffed into a phone shell. When the app is working at its best, it has the polished, confidence-inspiring quality you want when you are making bigger purchases. Still, this is not a flawless experience. My biggest frustration was that some parts of the app feel more polished than others, especially around saved items. The wishlist/list system is useful in concept, but I did run into moments where managing saved products felt a little less dependable than it should. In an app where planning and organizing are central to the shopping journey, even small hiccups here stand out more than they would elsewhere. The second weak spot is account depth, especially if you expect the app to serve as a complete long-term archive of your IKEA life. Order and receipt access are convenient in principle, and having IKEA Family information in the app is genuinely handy, but the historical view does not always feel as robust as power users might want. If you buy larger furniture pieces and expect to look back through years of purchases for warranty or replacement reasons, the app can feel thinner than it ought to. The third issue is localization and flexibility. Depending on region, the language experience may not be as adaptable as it should be. For an international retailer with customers who move, travel, or shop across language boundaries, this can become an unnecessary point of friction. It does not ruin the core app, but it does make the experience feel less globally polished than the rest of the design suggests. There are also a few smaller rough edges that keep it from perfection. Delivery support can feel uneven depending on the item, and occasional bugs or brief stalls can interrupt an otherwise smooth session. These weren’t deal-breakers in my use, but they are enough to remind you that this is still a large retail app managing a lot of moving parts. Who is this app for? It is a great fit for regular IKEA shoppers, anyone planning a room project, and people who like to browse first and buy later. It is especially strong for users who shop both online and in-store, because that is where the app’s practical features really shine. If you like keeping lists, checking stock before heading out, and streamlining your store visit, this app earns its place on your phone. Who is it not for? If you only make a very occasional IKEA purchase and prefer using a browser, you may not get enough extra value to care. And if you are the kind of shopper who needs immaculate saved-item management, detailed long-term purchase history, or a highly flexible multilingual setup, you may notice the gaps sooner than the strengths. Even with those caveats, the IKEA app is easy to like. It is clean, capable, and more useful in the real world than many retail apps with similar ambitions. Most importantly, it respects your time. That alone puts it ahead of a lot of the competition. It may not be perfect at the edges, but for browsing, planning, and making IKEA shopping less stressful, it is one of the better shopping apps available.
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