PRESS RELEASE


For more information, contact:
Paul B. Toms, Chief Executive Officer, or
Larry Ryder, Chief Financial Officer at 276-632-2133

For immediate release: June 25, 2002

Hooker Furniture Moves from Over-the-Counter to Nasdaq Listing

Martinsville, Va.: Hooker Furniture Corporation (OTC-BB: HOFT; Nasdaq-SCM: HOFT)
announces that it will be listed on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market, a nationally
recognized electronic stock market, effective June 27, 2002. The Company's stock
will be traded under the symbol HOFT. Hooker's stock price closed at $15.60 on
June 24, 2002 on the OTC-BB.

"This is an important step in making Hooker a more visible, publicly traded
company," said Paul B. Toms Jr., Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. "We
believe our shareholders will benefit from the listing on the Nasdaq SmallCap
Market in a variety of ways, including improved trading of Hooker stock."

"We believe that listing on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market will facilitate greater
liquidity and price efficiency for our investors, as well as provide greater
access to capital markets for the Company to finance future growth
opportunities," added E. Larry Ryder, Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice
President of Finance.

In April 2001, Hooker moved from pink sheet trading to trading on the OTC-BB.
"Based on our experience following our move to OTC-BB, we would expect that
listing on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market will improve our visibility in the
investment community," Ryder said.

Nasdaq is the world's largest electronic stock market, listing the securities of
nearly 4,100 of the world's leading companies. A core group of financial firms
called "market makers" are the key to Nasdaq's market structure. More than 500
market-making firms trade on Nasdaq, acting as distributors for Nasdaq-listed
securities. The following firms will act as the initial "market makers" for
Hooker stock: BB&T Capital Markets, Suntrust Robinson Humphrey Capital Markets,
and Raymond James & Associates.

According to Ryder, "We believe Hooker stock makes an attractive case for
investors wishing to add a quality "smallcap" company to their portfolio." Toms
added, "Hooker has a 78-year history of profitability and solid sales and
earnings." From fiscal 1990 to 2000, Hooker's sales grew at a cumulative average
annual growth rate of 12.8%. Over the same ten-year period, net income grew at a
cumulative average annual growth rate of 14.3%. The Company recorded the best
financial performance in its 78-year history in 2000. While the 2001 economic
recession adversely affected sales at Hooker, as well as other companies in the
furniture industry, Hooker's net sales for the first half of 2002 have increased
10.5% to $123.2 million compared to $111.5 in the first half of 2001. Net income
for the first half of 2002 increased 65.6% to $6.3 million from $3.8 million in
the 2001 first half. Earnings per share for the first half of 2002 increased
72.3% to $1.12 from $0.65 for the same period of 2001.



According to Toms, "Hooker is well-positioned to compete going forward in the
furniture industry, with a good mix of domestically manufactured and imported
products and a very strong dealer base. We have an excellent reputation for
quality, design, and value in the furniture marketplace and we are a key
resource for our dealers in a number of important product niches including home
office, home entertainment, and imported accent furniture."

In the increasingly global marketplace, Hooker has over 13 years of experience
with offshore sourcing, primarily in the Far East. "With our import experience,
we are positioned to take advantage of opportunities in both domestic and
overseas product offerings - flexibility that is vitally important given the
changing dynamics of the furniture industry," Ryder said.

At its June 2002 meeting, the Board of Directors declared an increased dividend
of $0.10 per share payable on August 30, 2002, to shareholders of record August
15, 2002. The Company paid a dividend of $0.09 in May 2002. In announcing the
dividend increase, Toms commented, "Earnings are returning to more historical
levels and we are in a good cash flow position. One of our ongoing goals is to
show consistent growth in dividends to shareholders. We are now positioned to do
that."

Ranked among the nation's top 20 furniture manufacturers in sales, Hooker
Furniture is a 78-year-old producer and importer of wall and entertainment
systems, home office, occasional, dining and bedroom furniture with
approximately 1,850 employee-owners. The Company has six manufacturing
facilities and a distribution center in Virginia and North Carolina.

Plant locations include Pleasant Garden, Kernersville and Maiden, NC and
Martinsville and Roanoke, VA.

Operating results for previous periods mentioned in this release may not be
indicative of future results. This financial information should be read in
conjunction with the financial statements and accompanying notes included in
Hooker's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended November 30, 2001;
and, Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended May 31, 2002,
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Certain statements made in this report are not based on historical facts, but
are forward-looking statements. These statements can be identified by the use of
forward-looking terminology such as "believes," "expects," "may," "will,"
"should," or "anticipates," or the negative thereof, or other variations
thereon, or comparable terminology, or by discussions of strategy. These
statements reflect the Company's reasonable judgment with respect to future
events and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual
results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. Those
risks and uncertainties include the cyclical nature of the furniture industry,
domestic and international competition in the furniture industry, general
economic or business conditions, both domestically and internationally,
fluctuations in the price of lumber, which is the most significant raw material
used by the Company, supply disruptions or delays affecting imported products,
adverse political acts or developments in the international markets from which
the Company imports products, fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates
affecting the price of the Company's imported products, and capital costs.