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Yard sales: 6 things to buy and how to get a better deal

Posted Nov 20 2007, 08:45 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from Trent Hamm at partner blog The Simple Dollar.

Let’s face it: Most items at garage sales and yard sales are junk. It's stuff the family conducting the sale wants to get rid of, hoping to make $100 on a good weekend.

With that in mind, I often visit yard sales to look for specific items. Here are six things I usually look for:

  • Old towels. Don’t think of them as towels; think of them as heavy-duty rags. I keep a tub of them in the basement, and, for a lot of things, they’re better if they’re well-worn. If I get them heavily stained with oil, so what? I get them as clean as possible with bleach and keep using them until they fall apart.

  • Junky T-shirts for the whole family. We keep T-shirts to wear while mowing or cleaning in a tub in the garage, and sometimes use them for rags as well.

  • Children’s books. I find piles of children’s books that look as though they were scarcely read, and I pick up a stack for a dollar or two. I look for books for all ages, storing the books that are too advanced for my children.

  • Collectibles I’m knowledgeable about. This includes baseball cards and vintage video games. I usually have a good idea what something is worth, and that has paid off for me many times.

  • Plastic food containers. I'm looking for Tupperware and the like. If the lid attaches tightly but easily, I’ll always take it, because I’m always looking for more storage containers for the pantry.

  • Children’s clothes. Many people who shop yard sales are looking for kids' clothes but surprisingly buy just one or two items. I tend to shop for them late in the day and offer a  lowball price for everything in specific sizes.

Having said that, here are the tactics I use to get even better deals:

Negotiate. Do that knowing that the sellers view the items as one step away from Goodwill or the Dumpster.

Buy large groupings of stuff. Make an offer for all the old video games or all the towels. I usually offer about 40% of the total asking price if it’s early in the sale. 

Offer even less near the end of a sale. If you’re there late Sunday afternoon, make absurdly low offers. I have been known to make offers for bundles of stuff at 15% of what they’re listed for.

Remember, you’re not going to yard sales to find items to display with pride. Look for big bargains on stuff with utility -- and don’t buy things you’re not going to use or need.

Other articles of interest at The Simple Dollar:

The lawn-care dilemma: How much time and effort should you spend?"

 "6 ways planning ahead saved money this weekend"

"Organization 101: A visual guide to how I manage the information in my life"

Comments

 

Don't forget Uncle Sam!  Items that are in decent shape can be donated, just remember to get a receipt for the items.  It pays to itemize your list of donations and attach that to the receipt for tax time.  With the way kids outgrow clothes or don't want "it" anymore, I've had over $3,500 per year in deductions for the past 5 years!  That saves the hassle of yard sales and strangers scoping out your property/home  for a possible invasion later on.  The time to set up, sell, and clean-up is instead spent on listing and bagging similar items and one trip to the local donation station.  But to get some quick cash...have fun and dive into the world of yard sales/swap meets/flea markets!

I love to yard sale!!! I hardly ever go to the mall to buy brand name clothing when I can get the same or better for less than 1/4 of the store cost.I have bought everything from house hold items to garden tools for myself and have bought nice items to give as gifts for all occassions.The nice thing is that you can resell after you get tired of the stuff and not be out of very much money and I have actually sold items for more than I paid for them.

I agree with Doug W. on trying to get a better price by haggling is sometimes being excessively cheap, although, in some cases, I have been to garage sales in more "upscale" neighborhoods and it seems they tend to price their items higher!!  Funny, I will see a used pair of childrens sandals marked $5.00 and put them right back down.  then see the same thing at another sale  with a much more reasonable price and buy.  Sometimes its worth it to snub the snobs!

ALWAYS STOP AT YARD SALES, GOODWILL, CONSIGNMENT SHOPS BEFORE YOU ENTER STORES AND YOU'LL BE SICKENED AT THE HIGH PRICES YOU'RE PAYING IN STORES.WHEN YOU MAY FIND WHAT YOU NEED FOR A FOURTH OF THE PRICE, THEN TAKE THE MONEY YOU'VE SAVED AND  GO OUT TO EAT OR HAVE FUN WITH YOUR FAMILY.........

Another option after conducting a garage sale is freecycling.  Check your area for freecycling sites.  People are very polite for the most part and your "trash" can become someone else's "treasure".  

During a recent garage sale, I could not practically give away books- mostly novels, Christian books, or self-help books. On freecycle.com, I found a man who reads lots of books and passes them on to others. He is a graduate student and a young father. I got rid of several boxes of books and made my husband very happy.(I am somewhat of a packrat).  

It feels good to give to someone who maybe cannot afford something brand new. The most popular items on the list seem to be gently used children's clothes and toys, but many types of items get grabbed up fast.  You can also put out requests for items you yourself are looking for.

I read the local newspaper's yardsale section and write down the address I definately want to go to. Then I sit down and map out my route as I go "shopping". If I come upon a sale I didn't have on my list, I stop anyway and usually that is the one I find what I need. Another place to buy "treasures" is at Church rummage sales. With the entire congregation donating, there is always plenty to choose from.

Sorry Daphne F., but if a tupperware item or any plastic item has been used in the making or carrying of meth, the item would not even be on a sale because the odor would be so strong you would think it came from the city dump.

Come on now Arlene Seay, I think you have been misinformed madam if you think a RUBY pendant would be worth $400,000 and fit inside a locked "false book". Unless there were diamonds all around it and it had been cut by the best jeweler in the area, that is just a "red piece if glass".

thank you for all the differnt ideas that you have espressed.  Single mother of four and grandmother of three.  Raising children and grandchildren is hard but is easier with yard sales  able to get close to new items without the huge price tag attached.  

I bought a viola at a garage sale for $5.00.  I have also held garage sales and was amazed at the number of people who were making their budget work by buying tools, cleaning materials and cosmetics.  I liked the cameraderie and what I thought was a hot item never sold. Charities were not that eager to come and pick things up, so arrange that beforehand. Suzanne

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