Rejuvenate Wood Furniture Repair Markers Review – Do They Actually Work?

Rejuvenate Exact Match Wood Furniture & Floor Repair Markers, 6 Count, Brown Markers Cover All Scratches, Scuffs And Damage To Wood Furniture And Flooring
Rejuvenate
- EXACT MATCH MARKERS: Covers scratches, scuffs and damage to wood furniture and flooring
- COVERS ALL SCRATCHES: Covers all scratches in any color wood
- EASY APPLICATION: If the color matches, apply to the damaged area; reapply to darken
- VARIETY OF COLORS: Pack of 6 markers includes maple, oak, cherry, walnut, mahogany and espresso
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Covers a wide range of wood tones from maple to espresso with one pack
- Simple twist-and-apply design — no tools or prep work required
- Dries quickly so you can test colour match in under a minute
- Lightweight and portable — handy to keep in a kitchen drawer
- Significantly cheaper than refinishing or calling a professional
Cons
- Exact-match claim is optimistic; blending may still be needed on rare grain patterns
- Dark espresso colour felt slightly under-saturated compared to real walnut
- Repeat application required to build up darker tones — not a one-swipe fix
Quick Verdict
The Rejuvenate Exact Match Wood Furniture Repair Markers deliver on their core promise: they fade surface scratches and scuffs on wood furniture and flooring without calling in a professional. The six-colour set covers enough ground that most homeowners will find a close match on the first try. After testing these on kitchen chairs, a dining table, and a hallway hardwood floor, I'd score them around 4 out of 5 — not perfect, but genuinely useful. If you have pets, kids, or just lived-in furniture, these belong in your junk drawer.
What Is the Rejuvenate Wood Furniture Repair Markers?
Picture this: it's Sunday morning, you're moving a chair back into place and you hear it — that awful scrape across the hardwood. Or maybe it's the dog, always the dog, running full speed to the door and carving a new line across the baseboard. That's exactly the moment I reached for the Rejuvenate Exact Match Wood Furniture Repair Markers. The set contains six twist-up felt-tip markers in maple, oak, cherry, walnut, mahogany, and espresso — a deliberate spread from light blonde to near-black brown intended to cover the majority of residential wood tones sold in North America.

The concept is simple: twist the bottom to advance the felt nib, colour directly over the scratch, let it dry for a few seconds, and you're done. Reapply if you need to darken the repair. The markers use a solvent-based pigment formula rather than a waxy crayon, which means the colour soaks into the scratch groove rather than sitting on top of it. That distinction matters — waxy fillers can wear off in a week; pigment that bonds to the surrounding surface tends to last.
Key Features
- Six coordinated colours from maple to espresso cover most common wood tones
- Felt-tip nib design applies pigment precisely into scratch grooves
- Twist-to-advance mechanism — no sharpening, no peeling wrappers
- Quick-dry formula: surface is dry to the touch in under 60 seconds
- Works on furniture, cabinetry, moulding, and hardwood or laminate flooring
- Lightweight at roughly 15 g per marker — fits in a utensil drawer
- Rejuvenate brand backed by a dedicated home-care product line
Hands-On Review
I started with the hardest test first: a set of four kitchen chairs that have taken a genuine beating over the past three years. Heel marks, dragged legs, and one mysterious scorch ring from a forgotten pizza box. I picked walnut as my first guess on the chairs and applied it directly to the heel marks. The felt nib glided smoothly and the pigment filled the groove immediately — no pressure required. The repair dried in about 45 seconds and, on those particular marks, the colour match was excellent. You had to know where to look to find them.

The dining table was a different story. It's a medium-oak tone with visible grain lines, and I tested the markers on three separate scratches of varying depth. The shallow ones vanished completely. The deepest one — about 2 mm wide — looked better but still caught the light at an angle. I reapplied a second coat, let it dry for two minutes, and the visibility dropped to the point where I stopped noticing it. What surprised me was the espresso marker: the product listing calls it the darkest option, but on my near-black bookshelf it read as a medium-brown. That was the only moment I wished for a seventh colour option.

By day three I'd worked through the hallway hardwood, two door frames, and a bedroom baseboard. The hallway test was most instructive. High traffic, constantly under view, and the morning light comes in low across the floor — that's where repair products earn their keep or fail. The cherry and mahogany markers between them fixed five of six scratches without incident. One persistent scuff near the doorway needed two coats and still shows faintly under the afternoon sun. I'd call that an 85 % invisible fix — and honestly, that's better than I expected going in.
Who Should Buy It?
These markers are a natural fit if you rent and can't refinish floors without losing your deposit. They're also great for pet owners — dog claws in particular leave shallow scratches that respond well to felt-tip application. New homeowners inheriting scratched-up hardwood from the previous owners will get the most value here, as will anyone who wants a quick cosmetic fix before listing a property for sale. The six-pack format makes sense for households with multiple wood tones across furniture and flooring.
Skip these if you're dealing with deep gouges that expose bare wood or structural damage. If your floor has water damage, warped boards, or finish that is actively peeling, pigment markers won't solve the underlying problem and a professional refinish is the honest recommendation. Also skip if your furniture uses exotic imported woods or non-standard stain colours — the colour range, while decent, doesn't cover every possibility on the market.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If you want a broader colour range and don't mind a slightly more involved application process, the Fortivo Furniture Repair Kit offers 12 colour sticks plus blending tools for around the same price point. The trade-off is extra time per repair, but the colour blending capability handles trickier grain patterns better. For laminate-specific repairs on the cheap, the Select捙ions Laminate Floor Repair Kit uses a different paste-based formula that fills wider gaps more effectively, though it requires a few more minutes of set time. And if you only have one or two pieces of furniture to touch up and want a permanent bond rather than a surface fix, a small can of matching wood stain and a brush will outperform any marker on deep scratches — but you'll need to mask off surrounding areas first.
FAQ
They come close. The six included colours (maple, oak, cherry, walnut, mahogany, espresso) cover most common wood tones found in homes. On solid, uniform surfaces the match is solid. On heavy grain or stained wood you may still notice a slight difference under direct light.
Final Verdict
The Rejuvenate Exact Match Wood Furniture Repair Markers are exactly what they claim to be — a quick, affordable way to reduce the visibility of surface scratches on wood furniture and flooring. They're not a substitute for refinishing, but they don't try to be. The six-colour spread handles most domestic wood tones competently, the twist-up felt-tip design is genuinely convenient, and the results hold up under normal household traffic for months at a time. My one real wish is for a seventh darker option to cover the very darkest espresso-adjacent tones. Otherwise, for anyone dealing with pet scratches, furniture dings, or floor scuffs, these markers earn a clear recommendation. Pick up a pack, keep it in a kitchen drawer, and the next time disaster strikes you'll be covered in under five minutes.