How to Run a Profitable Garage Sale

Garage sales, yard sales, tag sales, boot sales. Whatever you call them, they're a great way to make extra money while ridding your home of unwanted Stuff. A well-organized and well-stocked garage sale can bring in hundreds of dollars, so it's important to plan them out properly.
I consider myself a bit of an expert on pulling together a kick-ass and profitable garage sale - I held another one just last weekend - so I thought I'd share my wisdom with The Non-Consumer Advocate community.
Here are my top tips for running a profitable garage sale:
-
- Make sure you have enough stuff to warrant a garage sale. This may seem like a no-brainer, but having enough Stuff to make people get out of their cars is key. Start a garage sale pile as far ahead in advance as possible. I'm not suggesting that you bring Stuff into your home in order to later sell at a garage sale. (Garage sale prices rarely warrant a resale mentality; for that use Craigslist or Facebook Marketplace.)
-
- Get help. Recruit a friend or family member to act as your backup. This will be important for potty breaks, busy times, safety, setup and entertainment. Otherwise, no one will believe it when you tell your story about the distinguished looking woman who specifically asked if you had any "1970s vintage porn."
-
- Keep it short. Friday, Saturday, Sunday sales are exhausting. I've been known to have one -ay sales, put everything back into the garage (still on their tables), and then do another sale months later. Believe me: You'll be zonked after one day, so know and respect your endurance.
-
- Move your car from in front of your house. If shoppers can't find an easy parking spot, they're likely keep driving along. And while you're at it, see if you can convince your neighbors to move their cars as well.
-
- Talk to your neighbors about organizing a group sale. Neighborhood garage sales attract tons more customers, so spread the word ahead of time to arrange multiple sales. Or, better yet, hold your garage sale during an established entire neighborhood garage sale day. Talk to your neighborhood association.
-
- Look beyond household Stuff as your merchandise. I have dozens of small euphorbia plant starts that have volunteered in my front yard, as well as uninvited Lady's Mantle. I will pot these up and sell them for 50¢ to $1 apiece. I also have some landscaping stone leftover from our stone wall project and will put that out as well.
-
- Place individual Craigslist ads for your more desirable or bigger ticket items. I did this with our last garage sale two years ago and every single one of these items sold. I placed them as regular listings, but then wrote that they could be seen at my garage sale, with all the pertinent info. I also made sure to delete each of these listings as soon as they left the property. This may sound like a pain in the tuchus, but you can assemble the listing ahead of time, and then wait to approve them until the evening before.
-
- Have a box of free stuff. Nothing is more fun than finding something for nothing, so I'll be placing a large, well marked "FREE" box close to the curb. I'll also mention the free box on the main Craigslist ad and place an individual Craigslist listing in the Free category.
-
- Don't price your stuff too low. People like to bargain, so allow some wiggle room. Also, you want to make money. You can always have a 50%-off sale over the last couple hours.
-
- Price every item. If there's no price on something, customers have no idea what a bargain it is.
-
- Offer free lemonade or even just ice water. Most garage sales are held on hot days (except here in Portland, where everything is done in the rain), so a jug of watery lemonade or refreshing ice water is a nice gift to your customers.
-
- Price items like a store would. I drink a lot of Red Rose tea, which comes with a tiny ceramic doo-dad in every box. I put these out at my last garage sale at "50¢ apiece or three-for-a-dollar," and everyone, adults and children alike went nuts for them. And no one bought less than three.
-
- Be friendly - but not too friendly. This may sound like odd advice, but I know that I mostly just want to be left to myself when I'm shopping, and doubt that I'm alone in this preference. I hate it when store clerks are too pushy, and garage sales are no different. Greet the person and then allow them to quietly peruse your crap.
-
- Don't base what you put out on what you would buy. I've been extremely surprised by what sells and what doesn't at my garage sales. You never know if someone likes to fix broken things or is looking for materials for an art project. If it's something you don't want and it's safe, put it in your garage sale.
-
- Put up easy to read garage sale signs. Keep in mind that many of your potential customers are passing your sign at 35 miles per hour. Make the address and hours big and legible. You can always write some of the more juicy details in small script, but no one will come if they don't know where you're located. And when your garage sale is over, take your signs down! Otherwise it's just graffiti and disrespectful to your neighborhood. It goes without saying, the best places for your signs are at intersections where cars have to stop anyway.
-
- Place more exciting items closer to the curb. Got a ton of old magazines? Great, but don't have that be what passerby see first. Put the awesome cool stuff out front and you'll have more people stop by.
-
- Make sure to have lots of small bills and change. Also bags. Nothing is more frustrating for customers than trying to pay and having it be a problem.
-
- Keep the money somewhere safe. A lock box is great, but if you're unable to constantly guard it, it's worthless. I wear an apron with a big front pocket. Not only can I keep the money right on me, but it helps clarify who the seller is.
-
- If you have the original box, keep it. Even if an item has been used, it's somehow more appealing in the box.
-
- Make yourself comfortable. You are going to have both busy and slow times, so put out a chair for yourself, slather on the sunscreen and wear a hat. Plan what you're going to eat that day, and keep a bottle of tap water by your side.
- Have a plan for what you'll do with your unsold merchandise. Some non-profits will come pick up unsold garage sale Stuff, so research this ahead of time.
I ended up making $450 from my one-day garage sale last weekend. With the exception of a bicycle, this was all from low-priced items. The money now sits in a "Vacation Fund" savings account. Money in, crap out - what's not to love?!
Katy Wolk-Stanley
"Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without."
Click HERE to follow The Non-Consumer Advocate on Instagram.
Click HERE to join The Non-Consumer Advocate Facebook group.





Love this! We hold a community garage sale every year and it truly amazes me what people will haul away! We also put up signage encouraging "bundle pricing". I also collected 20 or so banana boxes for people to put stuff in by the cash out table. It encouraged them to keep shopping. We kept a roll of tape and a sharpie pen to label their box.
4 am here in Brisbane, Australia ( I’m a night owl, since retirement I have loved being able to sleep in until 9.30 am, and it’s autumn here, so lovely weather for sleeping in!}and I enjoyed hearing about your garage sale. We have a “ Garage Sale Trail” here in August ( early Spring) I live the car-less life, and bemoan it at those times. During the year the City Council has a free “Kerbside pick up “ for “hard rubbish”, appliances and furniture.During the rest of the year , home owners get 4 free tickets to dispose of trailer loads at council tips, otherwise there is a fee. Our suburbs kerbside side pick up has just finished, I don’t allow myself to even look, having downsized 2 years ago to move into a 500 sq foot compact one bedroom unit in an inner city , vertical, retirement village, I operate on a 1 in, 1 out regime, and need to live a clutterless life! Love this site, I’m frugal, no car, don’t drink, smoke or gamble,, and manage, like others here , to live a joyful life, and I enjoy the “attitude of gratitude “ that is so prevalent here. I lost my beloved only daughter last year, after a 2 year battle with cancer, and this site has been a source of distraction and comfort for me. I’m sending waves of appreciation your way!
PS! I love it when people add location to their posts, I know many of you are American, but , like Australia, that encompasses a vast assortment of very different climates and life styles, and there is a whole other world out there , as well!
You can reuse old Vacation Bible School or political campaign yard signs for your sale. The ones with corrugated cardboard or plastic and metal legs. Either paint over them or cover them in paper or poster board and write GARAGE SALE or YARD SALE with a directional arrow. I save all my signs for just this purpose. We put em all over the neighborhood.
(I also save money by just ordering the latest No Kings, Vote Blue or anti-Trump sign, not the metal legs that could come with it, and using the metal legs I already have to put it up in the yard.)
I also kept some huge and sturdy Democrat candidate signs that were nailed to my wood fence (overlooks a busy street). Will turn those over, put 'em on saw horses, blank side facing up, and voila! I have some nice sturdy tables for my items.
A guy at our church saves his metal coat hangers he gets each week with his work uniforms and donated them to the annual church rummage sale. We find that clothes on hangers display well, don't get all messed up, and result in better sales than items folded on tables.
Thanks for helping me get in the yard sale mood, Katy!
I agree with all you wrote, except that I have no interest in bargaining. I add for sellers:
No smells, notably air fresheners and cigarette smoke.
No pets. I don't care how much you love your dog.
Give small children something to do or have someone to keep an eye on them away from the action. The worst sales are where someone is screaming at the kids. I also want to be briefly greeted and then left alone to shop, and don't want to hear your side of your cell phone conversation.
"Merchandise" your stuff-- as Katy wrote, put interesting stuff nearer the road. If I drive by and see waves of pink, I know it is girl clothes. A big or unusual item draws people's attention. Have lights on in dark garages. Run an electric fan on yourself if you are sitting in a warm garage.
Sort by general categories-- dishes, decorative, toys, tools. Re-arrange it in your down times, because things get moved and tags fall off. Tables have to look a little crowded, but not too crowded. My Mom was an expert at this. She said that if someone picks something up, they are more likely to buy it, and I agree, yet people don't usually want to take the time to dig through a deep box.
Mom would have a spring sale at home, then visit a friend in the lake district later in the summer and sell stuff she had saved that people used in their cabins-- books, games, linens, dishes, small appliances-- at slightly higher prices than her home sale. Similarly, I would hold most holiday stuff and winter clothing for a fall sale.
Watch the temperature and maybe move your tables in the shade over the day. Candles, VCR/cassette tapes, and wool sweaters will not sell if they are placed in full sun!
The best garage sale I ever put on featured a lot of small furniture my employer was clearing out of the offices. It was going to the dump, so I asked for it and removed it. Once it was in my garage, I cleaned everything, patched and painted a few spots, and it sold like hot cakes. Sure helped fatten up the fund to buy a new lawn mower.
I have been going to garage sales for three decades, and ran my household and raised two children on mostly pre-owned stuff. All your tips are my tips. I would add a few.
1) Go alone. None of this "Oh you need this" or "This will look good on you." Nope. No conversations. No socializing. I need to focus and not be swayed by a friend/relative/child on whether to buy something. Only I can know that. When my kids were small, I had one along at times and I gave them a a small amount of money or they brought their own, to look at toys or books.
2) SO agree to not hover over potential buyers at your own sale. That is a big turnoff for me, and I've gotten it plenty of times.
3) As a seller, I mark things on the low side. Yes, I want to make money but even more, I want the stuff gone! I welcome bargaining (I do it myself as a buyer) but I have been to so many garage sales where the items are too high that bargaining still wouldn't get them down to my comfort zone. So I walked.
4) Hosting a garage sale is a lot of work, and individual pricing is laborious. Gather folding tables and group same-priced items on each table with the price sign. Or use tarps or blankets for your groups. Or, as I saw once at a garage sale, group same-priced items out on your paved driveway, draw circles around the groups with sidewalk chalk and write the price on the driveway! Brilliant!
Waiting for my garage season to start!