Community yard sales near me this weekend

Community yard sales near me this weekend

Caption 1

Community yard sales near me this weekend

Caption 2

Community yard sales near me this weekend

Caption 3

The World's Longest Yard Sale

August 3-6, 2023

The 127 Yard Sale now covers 690 miles from Addison, MI to Gadsden, AL and boasts thousands of vendors every year.

  • Plan Your Trip

    Get the 101 on the 127 Yard Sale! View the route map, talk to other yardsalers, find lodging, and more!

    Learn More

  • Become a Vendor

    Do you want to setup and sell your stuff at the 127 Yard Sale? Learn how it all works. Get the Vendor 101!

    Learn More

  • Rental Space Providers

    Do you have spaces available for vendors? Get listed on the website and let vendors know what your location has to offer.

    Learn More

Welcome to 127YardSale.com

Community yard sales near me this weekend

This is your one-stop-shop for everything 127 Yard Sale related. Whether it’s your first time participating or you’re a seasoned veteran, we can help! We have everything you'll need to be successful at the 127 Yard Sale as a Yardsaler, Vendor, or Rental Space Provider. We are always adding new features to the website and working to make the 127 Yard Sale the best it can be.

The World’s Longest Yard Sale

The 127 Yard Sale is commonly referred to as “The World's Longest Yard Sale”. That’s because it really is the longest yard sale in the world. To be exact, it’s 690 miles long and the route travels through 6 states; Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama. The majority of the route follows Highway 127 from Addison, MI in the north to Chattanooga, TN in the south. From Lookout Mountain, GA to Gadsden, AL the route switches to Lookout Mountain Parkway. Both are scenic drives allowing you to appreciate the beautiful countryside of these states all while enjoying the fun and excitement of The World’s Longest Yard Sale.

The 127 Yard Sale Community

Join in and become a part of the 127 Yard Sale community. To get started you should sign up first. It’s completely free. This will give you full access to the website and we will add you to our mailing list so you’ll receive the latest news and information about the 127 Yard Sale. We also sometimes have special contests or giveaways which are only for registered users. In addition, you’ll be able to create and respond to forum posts. Be sure to connect on Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram too.

The Garage Sale App for Finding Sales Near You

Are you having a yard sale?

Advertising your sale listing with Yard Sale Treasure Map is free and easy!

Community yard sales near me this weekend

Since 2008 Yard Sale Treasure Map has been the app of choice for yard sale, garage sale, tag sale, and rummage sale shoppers. This feature-rich app has incorporated years of feedback from users like you. Keyword search, route planning, and navigation are just the beginning!

Download the app today for iPhone/iPad or Android to find sales near you!

Community yard sales near me this weekend

Community yard sales near me this weekend

© Kolodgie Enterprises LLC

Hosting a garage sale can be an effective way to turn rarely used items into extra cash for a big splurge, paying off bills, or donating to a good cause. That said, a successful sale takes lots of planning, prep, and execution. Before you post any signs, use these tips, and you'll make the most cash possible for all your hard work. For more on a successful garage sale, we turned to Tanisha Porter, a professional organizer and owner of Natural Born Organizers in Los Angeles, and Shannon Quimby, a Portland, Oregon-based garage sale expert and designer.

Daniel Grill/Getty Images

1. Have a goal for your sale.

"The first thing people want to think about is the why," Porter says. "You need to know if you are holding it to recoup money, to generate income, or to pay it forward and make sure the items you are selling are going to a new family to live on again." Knowing why you're holding a garage sale can help you stay focused and motivated.

For Quimby, the original purpose for her annual garage sale was to raise money for extra materials and her DIY makeovers for her new home.But the simple sale turned into 17 years of running an epic event each summer with several friends. "We all make money, which ultimately makes a bigger and better sale. It's a win-win," Quimby says. "We also get to let go of stuff, make some moolah, and have less clutter at home. I use the money I make to go toward our vacation."

2. Check out the competition.

Take the time to walk through other local sales before you hold your own. You'll gather intel on what works, what doesn't, and how to price everything to sell. Go online and click through your community's message boards or newsletters, as well as online apps like Nextdoor, to note the words and descriptions that grabbed your attention and made you want to check out a sale.

3. Pick a date.

Fridays and Saturdays are generally the best days for a garage sale. Consider holding one the first weekend of the month, when many people get paid and have more discretionary cash. Set the date at least a month out to allow time to gather and price sale items.

Marty Baldwin

4. Start collecting items.

Sort garage sale items into categories, such as kids' gear, kitchenware, linens, and workout gear. This will simplify your setup. If your sale is so successful it becomes an annual event, like Quimby's, you can collect sale goods all year. "I make it a goal to put one thing toward the sale every day—even if it's just a pair of earrings," she says.

5. Price as you gather items.

Don't plan on pricing the night before the sale. You'll be too stressed and tired to make good choices. Instead, price items as you gather them. "Pricing takes forever. And you want to price ahead of your sale; otherwise, you'll lose money if people come and you don't know what you want for an item," Quimby says.

Porter also recommends thinking like your customers. "People who are coming to a garage sale want to bargain hunt," Porter says. "They're expecting everything to be at a deep discount. It may be brand new and still have the original tag on it, but since you're selling it out of your garage or on your lawn, people expect a bargain."

6. Use inexpensive tags.

Minimize expenses by choosing low-cost tags. Pick up stickers from a discount store or use masking tape and a permanent marker. To make your own tie-on versions, tear up brown paper bags into tag-size pieces and punch holes in them for stringing.

7. Write up a pricing sheet for clothes.

Put together a clothing price sheet so you don't have to price each piece separately. Quimby's typical prices range from 25 cents for socks to seven dollars for coats, "because clothing has got to be priced cheap," she says. Place price sheets in clear sheet protectors, and post several around the clothing. You can also tape a price sheet next to the cash-out area for easy reference.

8. Advertise your garage sale strategically.

Start posting online ads, hanging flyers, and a few days before the sale, tell everyone you know about it both in person and on your social media. Call it something catchy but simple, such as "Shannon's Huge Sale!" or "Friends' Ultimate Group Sale!" so your sale stands out. If you have sought-after items, such as kids' toys or clothes, specialty tools, craft supplies, or collectibles, make sure to note that in the ad. Always include your full address, the days of the sale, and times. For online sites, request that your notice posts a day or two ahead of the sale, and stays up through the last day. Promote your forms of payment in ads (and on the day of the sale), especially if you'll accept credit cards and online payments like Venmo.

Quimby never pays to advertise her sales, since there are so many free online options. Here are some of her favorites:

  • Craigslist or the CPlus app
  • Facebook and Facebook Marketplace
  • GarageSaleFinder.com
  • Garage Sales by Map
  • Instagram
  • Local paper
  • Yard Sale Treasure Map
  • YardSales.net

10. Post physical garage sale signs.

Hang easy-to-read, weather-proof signs within a mile of your house with heavy-duty tape, or use the existing nails on wood poles (where allowed). Quimby writes the days, times, and address with chunky markers for easy-to-read signs that can be reused for the next sale. "All your signs must look the same, so people know it's for the same garage sale, and they must be readable from afar, even if you handwrite it," she says.

Hang the signs high at both ends of your street and at nearby busy intersections where a driver can easily read them. Drive past them to verify their readability. Some communities have regulations about how and where you can post signs, so research this before you start. On the day before your sale, you can also use sidewalk chalk to draw arrows pointing to your house with words like "Sale!" and "This Way!" Quimby says this entices neighbors to check out your sale, because they'll feel like they're part of a scavenger hunt.

11. Have all the essentials ready.

The week before your sale, gather necessities and stash them together. Arrange to borrow lots of tables, including one for the cash-out area. "Call your friends, your neighbors, your parents, your cousins—anyone you can think of who will let you borrow one," Porter says. Stock a cash box with a variety of bills for change (this can be an old toolbox or crafting box, as long as it's sturdy and has shelves or dividers to separate the bills). Have an extension cord, lightbulbs, and batteries on hand, so people can test whether items work. Here are some other items Quimby suggests:

  • Calculator
  • Chairs
  • Clear, zip sandwich bags
  • Cooler for drinks
  • Hand sanitizer placed in multiple spots and at checkout
  • Music
  • Paper clips
  • Pens
  • Plastic grocery bags
  • Receipt book
  • Safety pins
  • Scissors
  • Sold tags and "I Live Here" tags to mark items that are not for sale
  • String
  • Tape
  • Tape measure
  • Tarps and umbrellas
  • Treats and drinks

12. Prepare digital tools if needed.

Buy an inexpensive credit card reader—for example, Square—and download online apps like Venmo, so you can accept credit cards or online transfer payments. Quimby says you might have to pay a processing fee if you accept cards, but usually the increase in sales more than makes up for it. Be sure to have a working hot spot, especially if your Wi-Fi can get iffy. Download an app to record sales, which can be especially helpful for group sales.

13. Set up the day before.

Give yourself a day ahead of the sale to set up. If items will be kept outside overnight, cover them with large tarps or old sheets to keep them protected. Porter recommends setting up your sale like it's a fun shopping experience. Put your borrowed tables to work, so everything is easy to see and no one has to bend over to look at something. Use books or sturdy shallow boxes as risers on tables to create a change in height and add more focal points.

Quimby sets up different "rooms." For example, she places all the kitchen or living room items together. Within these zones, arrange coordinated vignettes that resemble a store display window. If people can see the items easily, they're inspired to buy more. You can also designate a kids' section. This is the one place you want to put things down low so they're at kid height. "You want the kids to play with the toys because if the kids are active and playing, the parents get to shop longer," Quimby says.

14. Make sure everything is in good condition.

All sale items should be clean, unwrinkled, and in good condition. Pump air into tires and balls, and install working batteries in anything that needs them. Throughout the day, have a helper go through and fluff or fold clothing, put together new outfits, and rearrange pieces on tables. Quimby says people might even come back the second day to see what's new, or what they missed, and buy more.

15. Arrange clothing thoughtfully.

Hang clothes so they're easy to see. You can string a clothing line between trees or poles, hang clothes on a fence, or, if you have one, bring out a clothing rack. Take the time to display clothes in complete outfits—they're more likely to sell. You can also group items like T-shirts or shorts into sets of three to five and label them with their sizes. If you have items like handbags, dress coats, suits, or sports gear that can fetch higher prices, separate them into their own area and clearly identify them as specialty items.

16. Showcase jewelry and eyewear.

Set up an area for small items like jewelry, sunglasses, and readers next to the cash-out table. Pin jewelry on a cork bulletin board or use hooks to hang pieces on a window screen. Organize by style so more formal or kid-friendly pieces are grouped together. Always keep earrings together.

17. Group linens in sets.

Bundle sheets and pillowcases into sets and label them with their sizes (twin, queen, etc.). Group napkins together and lay them beside tablecloths, so people can easily pair things. Combine towels into sets that include a washcloth, hand towel, and bath towel. Wrap all bundles neatly together using twine or string.

18. Sell drinks and individually packaged treats at checkout.

Stock coolers or buckets full of ice to sell drinks at the checkout. Small baked goods can also be an easy way to boost profits. "Our friend had a baking business, so she brought individually wrapped cookies and sold them for $1 apiece. Each day she sold out in an hour and a half," Quimby says.

19. Be prepared for negotiations.

Use your intel from the competition to help you price items fairly, but be prepared for shoppers to negotiate. Before the sale, determine the lowest price you're willing to accept, Porter says. Quimby starts with a fair price and doesn't barter on the first day of her sale (or with any early-birds), but she will negotiate on subsequent days to keep things moving.

20. Think twice about allowing holds.

Holds just create hassle, Quimby says. "I learned from experience that most people don't come back, and if they really want it, they'll usually buy it once they know they can't put it on hold." For people who buy something but need to fetch a vehicle to pick it up, you can pleasantly remind them what time the sale ends and that everything leftover will be part of a donation pickup. That way, they are incentivized to return by the end of the sale.

21. Plan for an after-sale pickup.

Set up a donation pickup at the end of your sale to get rid of anything that remains. "Nothing that went into the sale should go back into your house," Porter says. Some charities require a month's notice to schedule one, so plan ahead. At closing time, let people keep shopping, but start moving items to the designated pickup area so you can wrap things up. Also, set up times for returning any borrowed tables.

Is there an app that tells you where garage sales are?

Finding the yard sales near you has never been more fun and easy! Yard Sale Treasure Map is an app for planning your treasure-hunting adventure. View your local yard sales in map or list format, view sale details and photos, get directions, and take advantage of advanced organizational and route planning features.

How do I find local garage sales?

How to Find Garage and Estate Sales.
EstateSales.net - Respected Option for Estate Sales. ... .
Yard Sale Search - Simple Search Options. ... .
GSALR.com - Visual Map of Garage Sales. ... .
Garage Sale Tracker - Ability to Refine by Item. ... .
Craigslist - Great for All Local Sales. ... .
Get Great Deals and Have Fun..

Which day is best for yard sale?

The most popular days for garage sales are Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Fridays and Sundays may bring in a decent number of buyers, but Saturdays are the best day to host a garage sale because they will attract both casual customers and serious shoppers.

What highway is the longest yard sale on?

That's because it really is the longest yard sale in the world. To be exact, it's 690 miles long and the route travels through 6 states; Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama. The majority of the route follows Highway 127 from Addison, MI in the north to Chattanooga, TN in the south.