Car Seat Upholstery Cost Calculator
Price 1 seat or a full set. Covers cushion, backrest, bolsters, and headrest separately with options for foam, material, and stitching pattern.
Car seat upholstery cost calculator
This tool prices individual seats.Need a different part of the car?
About This Calculator
The Car Seat Upholstery Cost Calculator gives you a per-seat price for reupholstering 1 seat, a pair, or a full set. You enter 7 details about the job and the tool returns a per-seat cost plus a scaled total, calibrated to 2026 U.S. auto upholstery shop rates.
People use the Car Seat Upholstery Cost Calculator for 3 common reasons:
- Pricing a single-seat repair where only the driver's seat is worn out.
- Budgeting a front pair reupholstery before visiting a shop.
- Estimating a full seat set, which includes the front pair, the rear bench, and the third row on SUVs.
The calculator has 7 inputs:
- Seat count from 1 to 8 seats.
- Seat type, which covers bucket, bench, captain's chair, and 3rd-row jump seats.
- Per-seat scope, which covers full seat, cushion only, backrest only, and bolsters plus headrest.
- Foam condition, which covers keep existing, patch repair, and full replacement.
- Material, which covers vinyl, cloth, standard leather, and premium leather.
- Stitching pattern, which covers OEM standard, contrast, diamond quilted, French seam, and baseball.
- Country, with seven options: United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and an international estimate fallback.
The output shows a per-seat price range, a scaled total for your seat count, and a 4-line breakdown covering materials, foam add-on, labor, and shop fee.
How Do We Calculate Car Seat Upholstery Cost?
We calculate car seat upholstery cost by building a per-seat base cost and scaling it by your seat count. The formula uses 7 factors that professional auto upholstery shops apply when quoting per-seat work.
1. Per-seat base cost
A bucket seat in cloth with all parts reupholstered and no foam work has a baseline of $180 in materials and 9 hours of labor. Multiplied by the U.S. shop rate of $65 per hour, the per-seat base is roughly $765 before any multipliers.
2. Seat type multiplier
Bucket seats use a 1.00 multiplier. Bench seats use a 1.30 multiplier because they cover more square footage. Captain's chairs use a 1.15 multiplier for extra adjusters and motorized components. Third-row or jump seats use a 0.75 multiplier because they are smaller and simpler to pattern.
3. Per-seat scope multiplier
A full seat uses a 1.00 multiplier. Cushion only uses a 0.40 multiplier because the seat bottom is roughly 35 percent of the total seat surface but adds a few hours for teardown. Backrest only uses a 0.55 multiplier. Bolsters plus headrest uses a 0.35 multiplier, the smallest targeted fix.
4. Foam add-on
Keeping existing foam adds $0 per seat. Patch repair adds $80 per seat for targeted filler and glue work. Full foam replacement adds $250 per seat for new high-density foam cut to the seat's shape.
5. Material multiplier
Vinyl and leatherette use a 0.70 materials multiplier. Cloth uses a 0.90 multiplier. Standard leather uses a 1.30 multiplier. Premium leather uses a 1.55 multiplier. Leather also adds 10 to 20 percent to labor hours because hides sew slower than cloth.
6. Stitching pattern multiplier
OEM standard stitching uses a 1.00 labor multiplier. Contrast stitching adds 15 percent. French seam adds 25 percent. Baseball stitch adds 30 percent. Diamond quilting adds 45 percent because every square of the pattern is sewn and each seam is precision-spaced.
7. Regional labor and material rates
U.S. shops average $65 per hour (BLS OEWS 2024 national mean). U.K. shops average $58. Canada $55. Australia $72. New Zealand $62. Ireland $60. India uses an estimated $10 per hour plus a 0.55 material-cost factor. The international estimate is $50 per hour. Your project hours and material costs adjust to the selected country; for state-level U.S. precision use the homepage full-car calculator.
Every subtotal adds a 5 percent shop overhead fee for handling, disposal, and setup. The final total runs through a plus-or-minus 15 percent variance range to reflect quote differences between shops in the same market.
Seat Anatomy: The Parts That Can Be Priced
A car seat breaks down into 5 nameable parts that can be priced separately. Understanding seat anatomy helps you decide which parts actually need work, which keeps the quote lower.
Click a part on the diagram to see its role and typical repair cost.
Headrest
The neck and head support at the top of the seat. A single headrest reupholstery costs $40 to $120 per seat. Headrests detach from the backrest and can be wrapped separately without touching the rest of the seat.
Backrest
The vertical panel your spine rests against. Backrest reupholstery alone costs $180 to $500 per seat. The backrest sees the least wear, but sun damage and cracking are common on leather seats parked outdoors.
Cushion
The seat bottom you sit on. Cushion reupholstery alone costs $150 to $430 per seat. The cushion wears first on the driver's seat because of repeated entry and exit rubbing the outer bolster and the main sitting surface.
Bolsters
The raised side panels of the cushion and backrest that hug your body. Bolster wear is the single most common seat failure on sports and leather seats. Bolster-only repair costs $90 to $260 per seat.
Piping
The decorative cord sewn into seams where 2 panels meet. Piping is optional but common in premium leather builds. Adding contrast piping costs $40 to $90 per seat in extra material and labor.
Tap a part on the diagram to highlight it above.
Single-Seat vs Full-Set Cost Math
Reupholstering 1 seat is not one eighth of the cost of reupholstering 8 seats. Per-seat cost drops as count goes up because the shop sets up, strips, and cleans once rather than 8 times.
Prices shown are median U.S. quotes for a bucket seat in cloth with OEM stitching and no foam work. Per-seat cost drops about 20 percent from single seat to full set.
Why the per-seat price drops with count
Three shop economies kick in when you bring multiple seats:
- One setup. Stripping, tagging, and cleaning the work area happens once. On a single seat, that is 2 hours. On 8 seats, it is still 2 hours.
- Bulk material cutting. A shop buying 20 square yards of leather for 8 seats pays less per yard than buying 3 square yards for 1 seat.
- Pattern reuse. After seats 1 and 2 are templated, seats 3 through 8 use the same template and seam layout.
Foam Replacement: When to Keep, Patch, or Replace
Foam under the seat cover usually outlasts the cover itself, but not always. Use this decision guide to figure out if your foam stays, gets patched, or gets replaced.
Question 1 of 3
Does the seat sag when you sit on it, or does it still feel firm?
Question 2 of 3
Are there visible lumps, depressions, or hard spots in the foam?
Question 2 of 3
Is the sagging in one small area, or across the whole seat?
Question 3 of 3
How old is the vehicle?
Question 3 of 3
Do you feel seat rails or springs through the cushion?
Keep existing foam
Your foam is in good condition. The shop can reuse it. Cost impact: $0 per seat. Expect the finished seat to feel the same as before.
Patch repair
Localized patches of high-density foam and bonding glue fix the worn spots without replacing the whole cushion. Cost impact: $80 per seat. Adds about 1 hour of labor.
Full foam replacement
The shop cuts a new high-density foam cushion to match the seat shape. Cost impact: $250 per seat. Adds 2 to 3 hours of labor per seat. Your finished seat will feel firmer than the current one.
What shops check when they price foam
Three physical signs drive the foam decision at every upholstery shop:
- Sag depth. A seat that compresses more than 2 inches under normal weight has lost significant foam density.
- Lump formation. Foam that has broken into chunks under the cover feels lumpy. Patches can fix spot damage but not widespread chunking.
- Frame contact. When you can feel the seat springs or frame through the cushion, the foam has lost 60 percent or more of its original thickness.
Stitching Patterns and Their Upcharge
Stitching pattern changes labor hours per seat, not material cost. A shop sewing a diamond quilted seat spends 45 percent more time at the machine than one sewing a flat OEM seam.
OEM Standard
No upcharge · 1.00× labor
Factory-style flat seams with matching thread. The fastest pattern to sew. Used on most daily-driver reupholstery when restoring the original look is the goal.
Contrast Stitching
+15% labor · about $85 extra per seat (U.S.)
Same flat seam as OEM but with a bold thread color such as orange, red, or tan. Adds a sporty or luxury feel. Uses thicker, higher-visibility thread that sews slightly slower.
French Seam
+25% labor · about $140 extra per seat (U.S.)
A double-row seam where the second line runs parallel to the first. Cleaner, more premium look. Common on luxury OEM leather seats. Requires precise spacing.
Baseball Stitch
+30% labor · about $170 extra per seat (U.S.)
A wave-pattern seam that mimics baseball glove stitching. Strong visual. Common on sport and custom hot-rod interiors. Each curve is hand-guided through the sewing machine.
Diamond Quilted
+45% labor · about $260 extra per seat (U.S.)
Each diamond in the grid is an individual sewn cell, sometimes with padding behind. The most labor-intensive pattern. Popular on Bentley, Rolls-Royce, and high-end custom builds.
Thread and material notes
Premium builds sometimes use bonded polyester or UV-resistant thread, which costs $12 to $25 per spool more than standard thread. For a single seat, thread alone accounts for only $3 to $6 of the total upcharge. The real cost sits in the extra machine hours.
Leather Seats: Specific Cost Factors
Leather seat reupholstery sits at the premium end of per-seat cost. A full pair of front bucket seats in leather runs $1,500 to $4,500 in most U.S. markets. Four factors move the price within that range.
Grade selection at the homepage-tool level
This calculator offers 2 leather tiers: Standard Leather at 1.30× materials and Premium Leather at 1.55× materials. For granular leather grade selection (top-grain, full-grain, or nappa), use the dedicated Leather Calculator, which prices full-car leather refits and grade-specific multipliers.
Hide yield and waste
A single bucket seat needs roughly 2.5 square yards of usable leather. A full hide averages 5.5 square yards but has irregular edges that waste about 25 percent. Shops price in the waste, which is why leather seats cost 3 to 4 times more than cloth even though the leather itself is only 2 times the per-yard price.
Perforation and airflow
Perforated leather (the tiny holes used on vented or heated seats) adds $60 to $140 per seat because the holes must align and the perforated section must be ordered pre-cut from the supplier.
Sewing speed on leather
Leather sews at roughly 70 percent the speed of cloth on an industrial sewing machine. Needles must be heavier, seam layouts are planned to hide natural hide flaws, and thread tension is dialed tighter. Shops add 10 to 20 percent to labor hours on every leather seat job.
Common leather seat failures
Four leather seat issues drive most repair demand:
- Driver bolster cracking. The left bolster on the driver's cushion cracks from repeated entry and exit. Bolster-only repair costs $90 to $260 per seat.
- Seat base color fade. Sun exposure bleaches leather over 8 to 12 years. Re-dye work costs $180 to $420 per seat, or a full recover costs $500 to $1,200.
- Stitching separation. Cotton core thread breaks down with age. Restitching alone costs $120 to $340 per seat if the leather itself is still intact.
- Perforation tears. Perforated panels tear across adjacent holes. The torn panel must be replaced in full, which is $220 to $550 per seat.
Brand-specific programs like Katzkin leather kits and LeatherSeats.com direct-order kits can be combined with a local shop install. Ask your shop if they are a certified installer for either program before buying the kit.
Why Use Our Tool?
There are 5 reasons to use the Car Seat Upholstery Cost Calculator before visiting any shop:
- Per-seat price transparency. Most shops quote totals only. This calculator breaks the number down per seat, so you know what the second or third seat adds.
- Scope precision. Choose cushion only, backrest only, bolsters plus headrest, or full seat. Save money on the parts that are actually worn.
- Foam decision support. Three foam options change the quote by $0, $80, or $250 per seat. The tool makes those numbers visible.
- Stitching upcharge preview. Before you ask for diamond quilting, see that it adds 45 percent to per-seat labor.
- No signup. No email, no phone number, no account. The calculator runs in your browser.
| Phone a Shop | Generic Online Form | Our Seat Calculator | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Per-seat cost visible | Rarely | Rarely | Always |
| Scope options (cushion, backrest, bolsters) | Verbally | Sometimes | Priced live |
| Foam replacement pricing | Quoted separately | Not included | Priced inline |
| Stitching upcharge shown | Varies | No | Yes, per pattern |
| Time to estimate | 1 to 2 hours | 10 to 20 min | 60 seconds |
How to Use This Tool
To use the Car Seat Upholstery Cost Calculator, follow 7 steps:
- Set the seat count. Pick 1 to 8 seats.
- Choose seat type. Bucket, bench, captain's chair, or 3rd-row jump seat.
- Pick the per-seat scope. Full seat, cushion only, backrest only, or bolsters plus headrest.
- Select foam condition. Keep existing, patch repair, or full replacement.
- Choose material. Vinyl, cloth, standard leather, or premium leather.
- Pick a stitching pattern. OEM standard, contrast, diamond quilted, French seam, or baseball.
- Set your region. U.S., U.K., Australia and New Zealand, or other.
The estimate updates the moment you change any input. Use the Save and Print button to keep a copy for your shop visit.
Two seats is the most common job: the driver and passenger pair.
Bucket is the default. Bench seats add 30 percent per seat because they cover more area.
Full seat is the most common scope. Cushion only uses a 0.40 multiplier because the seat bottom is roughly 35 percent of the total surface area.
Foam add-ons are flat per-seat fees: $0 for keep, $80 for patch, $250 for full replacement.
Cloth is the default. Full-grain, top-grain, and nappa leather pricing lives in the dedicated leather calculator.
OEM standard is the fastest pattern. Diamond quilted takes the most labor hours.
Region sets the shop hourly rate used to convert labor hours into cost.
Tips for a Great Seat Job
Follow 7 tips to save money and get a finished seat that lasts:
- Photograph each seat before teardown. The shop uses your photos to confirm OEM seam placement and stitch count during rebuild.
- Pull out loose change and keys first. Coins and keys caught in seat seams during teardown have torn $4,000 leather hides.
- Ask if your seat has airbag panels. Airbag-equipped seats require certified stitching or the airbag may not deploy. Roughly 80 percent of vehicles after 2008 have side-impact airbags in at least one seat.
- Fix bolster damage before it spreads. A 2-inch bolster tear left alone grows to a 6-inch tear within 12 months.
- Bundle foam work with the cover job. Shops charge teardown once. Adding foam work during cover replacement saves 2 to 3 hours per seat.
- Match thread color to OEM exactly. Contrast stitching on only some seats of a matched set looks accidental and reduces resale value.
- Plan for seat-cover sizing after the install. A Car Seat Cover Size Calculator tells you the correct protective cover size so the new upholstery stays clean.
Frequently Asked Questions
Direct answers to the most common questions about car seat upholstery cost, per-seat pricing, and seat scope decisions.
How accurate are these per-seat calculations?
These calculations are accurate within 15 percent for 9 out of 10 per-seat jobs. The calculator uses median 2026 U.S. auto upholstery shop data for per-seat reupholstery. Outliers usually involve airbag-equipped seats, classic cars, or specialty materials like alcantara.
Do these estimates include taxes and fees?
No. The estimate includes materials, foam add-ons, labor, and a 5 percent shop overhead fee. It does not include sales tax, disposal fees that vary by state, or seat removal and reinstallation fees some shops charge separately.
Can I use these calculations for insurance claims?
Yes, as a pre-claim reference. Insurers still require a written shop quote for settlement. Submit both the calculator estimate and the shop quote to strengthen your claim. Include photos of the damaged seat and any airbag panel locations.
How often are prices updated?
Prices are updated quarterly. The calculator pulls from a rolling 90-day sample of U.S. per-seat quotes. Major updates happen in January, April, July, and October.
What if my seat type isn't listed?
Pick the closest seat type. Most aftermarket racing or sport seats use Bucket pricing. A classic Volkswagen bench uses Bench Seat. Ford Explorer-style fold-up seats in the 3rd row use 3rd Row / Jump.
How much does it cost to reupholster car seats on average?
Car seat upholstery averages $400 to $1,200 for a single bucket seat in cloth and $800 to $2,200 for a front pair. Leather seats run $700 to $1,800 for a single seat and $1,500 to $4,500 for a pair. A full 8-seat SUV set in leather can reach $6,000 to $10,000.
How much to reupholster a single car seat?
A single car seat reupholstery costs $350 to $1,500 in the United States in 2026. Cloth lands at the low end. Leather with diamond stitching and full foam replacement lands at the high end. The single-seat per-seat rate is 15 to 20 percent higher than the per-seat rate on a full set because shop setup is a fixed cost.
Is it cheaper to reupholster seats or buy seat covers?
Seat covers cost 80 to 90 percent less than reupholstery. Universal seat covers run $30 to $150 per seat. Custom-fitted covers run $200 to $500 per seat. Reupholstery is permanent and worth the premium when the seat is visibly torn, the foam is worn, or you are selling the car.
Can I reupholster leather car seats?
Yes. Leather seats can be reupholstered with cloth, vinyl, or new leather. A leather seat reupholstered in leather uses this calculator's Leather (Standard) or Leather (Premium) option. For grade-specific pricing such as nappa, top-grain, or full-grain, use the dedicated Leather Calculator.
How long does car seat reupholstery take?
Car seat reupholstery takes 2 to 5 business days per front pair. Add 1 to 2 days for diamond quilting. Leather hide lead time adds another 3 to 10 days if your color is not in stock.
Can I reupholster only the seat cushion?
Yes. Cushion-only reupholstery costs $150 to $430 per seat in cloth and $280 to $760 per seat in leather. Pick Cushion Only in the scope input. This is the right choice when the backrest is still clean.
Should I replace the foam under my seat covers?
Replace the foam only if the seat sags more than 2 inches under weight, you feel the seat frame through the cushion, or the foam has broken into chunks. Full foam replacement adds $250 per seat. Patch repair adds $80 per seat.
What stitching patterns cost more to install?
Diamond quilting is the most expensive stitching pattern, adding 45 percent to per-seat labor. Baseball stitch adds 30 percent. French seam adds 25 percent. Contrast stitching adds 15 percent. OEM standard stitching adds nothing.
Are bench seats more expensive to reupholster than bucket seats?
Yes. Bench seats cost 30 percent more per seat than bucket seats because they cover more square footage and the pattern requires wider panels. A single cloth bench is $550 to $1,400 compared to $400 to $1,100 for a single cloth bucket seat.
How much does it cost to reupholster 3rd-row seats?
Third-row seat reupholstery costs $280 to $750 per seat in cloth and $450 to $1,200 per seat in leather. Third-row seats are smaller and simpler than front seats, so they use a 0.75 multiplier in the calculator.