Marivelle Home’s Tiffany Extendable Sofa is a motorized chenille sofa built for people who lounge hard and want more function than a standard deep-seat design. The live Marivelle listing shows it at $1,990 on sale, and the appeal is easy to see: you get a powered extension, a plush feel, and on the larger setups, a flip-back center module that adds a handy drinks-and-devices surface. It works best for movie-night loungers in flexible living rooms where TV time, laptop time, and stretching out all happen on the same seat. If you want a firm, upright perch, this probably is not your match.
Table of Contents
Product Overview
| Sofa | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
| Marivelle Home Tiffany Extendable Sofa | 4.0/5 | Powered extension; useful center module on larger sizes | Needs front clearance; chenille catches lint; restrictive returns | Loungers, couples, media rooms |
Final Verdict
At its best, the Tiffany feels like a lounge-first sofa with a built-in upgrade path: tap the remote, stretch out, and use the center module on larger versions when you want a spot for drinks or charging. In our testing, that flexibility mattered more than the tech on paper. The cushions felt plush but still supportive enough for long sits. The tradeoff is practical: you need room for the moving parts, access to power, and some tolerance for chenille upkeep.
Who It’s For:
- People who sprawl, nap, and binge-watch
- Couples who like a shared surface for drinks or devices
- Homes that can leave clearance for the extension
Who It’s Not For:
- Anyone who wants a firm, shallow sit
- People who hate visible cords or remotes nearby
- Shoppers who need an easy, low-friction return process

How We Tested the Tiffany
In our hands-on testing, we set the Tiffany in a standard living-room layout and cycled it through upright sitting, lounging, and repeated extension use. We scored assembly by how quickly it became usable and how intuitive the remote-controlled extension felt. We tracked layout practicality around front clearance, outlet access, and whether the flip-back module actually replaced a coffee table in daily use. Cooling focused on heat buildup during longer TV sessions. Comfort centered on lumbar support and how easily testers could change posture. We also watched cushion recovery over repeated use as part of durability, then folded cleaning and warranty-and-return considerations into the value score.
Daily Use Notes
By the first night, the Tiffany had already settled into a pattern: upright with a laptop, then a quick tap on the remote to stretch out for TV. In our testing, the chenille felt soft and textured without immediately collapsing into a sinkhole. I stayed comfortable through longer sits, and Dr. Adrian Walker had me pay close attention to how my lower back felt after posture changes. Marcus (6'1", 230 lbs) focused on edge support and stand-up ease; the base stayed steady, though he felt the fabric ran a little warm. Jenna and Ethan used it for movie nights, and while Ethan getting up for snacks transferred some movement, Jenna did not think it broke the experience. The flip-back center module on the larger Tiffany sizes ended up being more useful than gimmicky.
What we liked:
- The extension gives you more lounging room without adding an ottoman
- The center module feels genuinely useful on larger sizes
- Cushions stayed supportive across upright and reclined positions
Who it is best for:
- People who switch between laptop work, TV, and napping
- Couples who like a shared surface for drinks or devices
- Rooms with enough front clearance for the extension
Where it falls short:
- Hot sleepers and anyone who dislikes warmer upholstery
- Tight layouts where the moving section could crowd other furniture
- Homes that want ultra-low-maintenance fabric

Pros and Cons
| Pros | Cons |
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Key Details
- Price: $1,990 sale ($3,980 regular)
- Sizes: 200/220/240/260/280/300/320/340/360 cm
- Dimensions: Vary by size; allow extra front clearance when extended
- Upholstery: Textured chenille; 5 listed colors
- Larger sizes: Flip-back center module with 2 cup holders and USB/Type-C charging
- Extendable: Electric; remote included
- Warranty: 3y frame, 2y cushions, 5y motor
- Returns: 30 days; 20% restocking fee; unused in original packaging
- Lead time: ~20–25 business days production + ~8–10 weeks shipping/delivery

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
| Assembly | 4.2 | Quick to get functional once placed and powered; the remote was easy to learn. |
| Cooling | 3.8 | Comfortable overall, but the chenille felt warm for heat-prone testers during longer sessions. |
| Comfort | 4.3 | Deep, lounge-forward comfort with enough support to change positions without bottoming out. |
| Durability | 4.1 | In our testing, the cushions recovered well and the extension kept moving smoothly across repeated cycles. |
| Layout Practicality | 4.0 | Useful when the room can support it, but the moving section and power needs require planning. |
| Cleaning | 3.6 | Routine vacuuming and lint management come with the fabric; fast blotting helped with small spills. |
| Value | 4.0 | Feature set is strong for the sale price, though the return policy adds friction. |
| Overall | 4.0 | A smart lounge upgrade when your room and habits fit the powered-extension design. |
Should You Choose the Tiffany Extendable?
Choose the Tiffany if you want a lounge-first sofa with adjustable depth and you have enough front clearance plus a nearby outlet. Because the line comes in many sizes, the exact footprint depends on the version you order, but the extension means it asks more of the room than a standard fixed-depth sofa. It makes the most sense for taller loungers and people who move between upright work, semi-recline, and full sprawl. If your home includes kids or pets, plan for regular vacuuming and fast spill cleanup with chenille.
For simpler alternatives, Crate & Barrel’s Lounge Deep works for shoppers who want extra depth without a powered mechanism. IKEA’s KIVIK is the easier pick for spill-prone homes that value removable, washable covers over built-in tech.

Limitations
The Tiffany is not a plug-and-play purchase. The motorized extension adds another system to live with, and you need a nearby outlet plus enough open floor space for it to move freely. Marivelle also sells it in multiple sizes, so measuring your exact configuration matters. Chenille shows lint, can feel warmer over time, and rewards regular upkeep. The return policy is stricter than what many shoppers expect, especially because the sofa must be unused and sent back with the original packaging.
Tiffany vs Alternatives
Why choose these models:
- Powered extension adds usable lounging length without an ottoman
- Larger versions add a center module with cup holders and USB/Type-C ports
- Deep, relaxed proportions work well for sprawling and posture changes
Alternatives to consider:
- Lovesac Sactional: best when washable covers and modular refreshability matter more than built-in power features
- Burrow Nomad: better for easier assembly and flexible apartment-friendly modularity
- Crate & Barrel Lounge Deep: a simpler deep-seat route if you want plush comfort without a motor

Tiffany Pro Tips
- Measure for the sofa in its extended use case, not just its closed position.
- Keep coffee tables, cords, and bunching rugs out of the extension path.
- Plan outlet access before delivery so the power route does not look awkward in the room.
- Keep liquids away from the motor and wiring area.
- Use the remote gently and stop if anything feels obstructed.
- Vacuum often with a soft brush attachment.
- Blot spills quickly and skip harsh cleaners.
- Do not sit or stand on the backrests or arms if you want to protect long-term stability.
- If there is any chance of a return, keep the original packaging intact.
- Use a surge protector because power-surge damage is excluded from the warranty.
FAQs
Does the flip-back “coffee table” feature come on every size?
No. Marivelle reserves the flip-back center module for the larger Tiffany configurations, so smaller sizes do not get that function.
How much clearance should I plan for the extendable function?
Treat it like a moving footprint: leave enough front space for the extension to travel freely and keep loose cords out of the path.
Is chenille hard to keep clean day to day?
It is manageable, but it is not a low-effort fabric. In our testing, regular vacuuming, lint rolling, and fast blotting made the biggest difference.
What should I avoid doing with the motorized sections?
Keep liquids away from the motor area, use the remote gently, and stop if the mechanism feels obstructed. It also helps not to load the backrests or arms with body weight.