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Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Thrifty Mommy

Top 30 Yard Sale Tips

As I shared earlier this week, we made $2953 at our yard sale last weekend.  Prior to that, the most we had ever made was $580.  I can’t guarantee that you’ll do as well as we have, but here are some tips to help you get started. 

1)  Go through closets, dressers, toys, cupboards, cabinets, bookcases, etc before the yard sale.  Take out items that you no longer want and add them to your yard sale pile.  It’s good to do this at least once a year.  You may want to wait until spring when you’re doing your spring cleaning.

2)  Find a decluttering buddy.  I don’t know about you, but it is easier for me to get rid of things when I have some moral support.  It helps to have someone that can honestly say, “That doesn’t look good on you.  That’s out of style.  You haven’t used that in years.”  Sometimes a little nudge is all we need.  Unfortunately, I don’t have a decluttering buddy.    :(

3)  Price as you go.  As you find things in your home that you want to add to your yard sale, go ahead and take the few seconds to put a price on it.  This will save a lot of time and aggravation on yard sale day. 

3)  Spread the word.  I’m having a moving sale soon and I’ve already begun telling friends, people from church, and others about the sale.  I have people saying, “email me and let me know when it will be”. 

4)  If possible, post signs.  We like to use the fluorescent poster board and thick black permanent markers for our signs.  We have found that we do better with signs than with advertising.  People stop by and say that they saw our signs.

5)  Put your signs up the day before the sale so that people see them on their way home from work. Then they’ll think, “I’m going there tomorrow.” Otherwise, they might not be out and about the day of the sale.

6)  Let friends and neighbors be a part.  You can advertise the yard sale as a multi-family yard sale.  This will let customers know that there will be more things and a bigger selection to choose from.  Participants can also share in the advertising expenses.

7)  Put a price on everything.  Some people will walk away rather than asking the prices for things.  Even if the item is 25 cents, you need a price on it.  All those 25 cent items add up.

8)  To save time, buy the premade price stickers.  You can purchase these in the office supply departments at most stores.  Recently, I even saw these in Dollar Tree.

9)  If you’re selling an expensive item, take the time to print a copy of what the item cost new.  I’m doing this with toys that were expensive.  This helps the person to see that they are getting a good deal.

10)  Advertise your yard sale, garage sale, or moving sale on Craigslist.  It’s free!!!!  Specify what you will be selling.  I sold $120 to someone on Craigslist before the sale just by listing a moving sale ad. 

11)  Get up early the day of the sale.  If your sale starts at 7 am, you may consider getting up at 5 am.  This will allow you time to get everything organized and set out before customers begin to arrive.  Some early morning commuters may even see you outside and stop on their way to work.

12)  Specify if you don’t want “early birds”.  Some people are pretty serious about shopping yard sales.  They’ll come out as early as you’ll let them.   

13)  Look through purses, wallets, pant pockets, coat pockets, etc to make sure there is no money or credit cards.  Someone once told me they paid $1 for a purse that had $10 inside.

14)  Put attractive items in clear view.  A lot of people are looking for furniture, so it would be wise to put the furniture where drivers can see it from the road.

15)  Don’t pick a holiday weekend to have your sale.  I remember we did this one time and we made less than $100.  It was such a waste of our time.

16)  Don’t have continual yard sales.  You’ve seen people before who seem to be always having a yard sale.  It gets old and then people don’t drop by their sale anymore.  Plus, it’s tacky and your neighbors will be really annoyed.

17)  Have change.  It’s hard to determine how much change you’ll need and what kind of bills to get.  It seems as though first thing in the morning you’ll have customer after customer with $20 bills.  It’s really frustrating.

18)  Guard your money.  Unfortunately, sometimes theives show up at yard sales.  Usually every hour or so, I take my wad of cash out of my pocket or fanny pack (lol) and put it inside my house.

19)  Have bags available for your customer’s purchases.  I can’t stand plastic bags and I don’t understand it, but some people do like anything they purchase to be put into a bag.  It’s a courtesy. 

20)  Be friendly.  Greet each person or group that comes to your sell. 

21)  Group like items together.  All of the Christmas items should be together in one area, the kitchen stuff in another area, baby clothes in another, and so on.

22)  Sell miscellaneous items together.  If you’re like us, you have a bunch of half empty spray cans sitting in your garage.  We wondered who would buy them, but then we decided to put them all into a box and sell them all together in a lot.  This helps to sell those odd items. 

23)  Get some baggies and rubber bands.  The baggies and rubber bands will help to secure like items together or keep you from losing the pieces.  Come sell day, it will be hard to make sure your customers get all the parts that go with their items. 

24)  Have an extra person around to help out.  For me, this would be my husband.  This insures that you’ll get potty breaks and be able to eat.  It also helps so that you can talk to customers while someone else collects money or answers questions.

25)  Check with your local government or homeowner’s association to see if there are any restrictions.  Some areas require you to have a yard sale permit.  Yep, just another way to make money.   ;)

26)  When the yard sale is over, clean up your area and take down your signs.  Don’t you just hate seeing signs that are several weeks old or searching for a yard sale that was probably last week?

27)  Advertise.  This could be in your local paper or in a free online ad.  Regardless of where you decide, you’ll need help letting the public know of the sale.

28)  Check your yard and make sure it’s safe.  Wrap up garden hoses, fill any holes, and tape down extension cords or cables.  You don’t want you visitors tripping and getting hurt.

29)  Have a strategy in place for what you’ll do with the leftover items.  Will you put them back in your house for another yard sale later in the summer?  Will you give them to charity?  Have a plan in place.

30)  Get someone to watch the kids.  I can’t tell you the number of yard sales I’ve been to where the person’s children were out in the yard digging through their old stuff and getting upset that mom was getting rid of it.  If you can’t get a sitter, then you need to have some discussions with your children before the day.  Perhaps they could even help decide what they would like to sell.

Do you have any tips to add to this list?

karen signature with heart may 2008

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Comments

3 Responses to “Top 30 Yard Sale Tips”
  1. sarah says:

    Love these tips! Another I would like to add is to make your items look as attractive as possible. Clean them up, arrange them nicely, and get clothing racks if at all possible. That way, your customers can view the whole article of clothing rather than have to unfold it off a table. Most people are visually oriented and if it looks like you have nice stuff for sale they are more likely to stop by.

  2. Karen says:

    Sarah: So true! I have stopped at some yard sales where the things smelled horrible, like they had been in a crawl space for 10 years.

    I had so much stuff at my moving sale that I could not unpack it all. Surprising to me, people actually dug through and bought it. I did have it grouped alike though. I guess I did so well because it was a moving sale and not a yard sale and because of all the traffic on the streets. It was so crazy!!! I can’t even begin to tell you. I probably had 75 people there at one time. I think I had 40 or so in my basement den at a time.

  3. Becca says:

    I’ve never held a yard sale myself, but I heard a couple of tips on TV yesterday.

    ~Put batteries in toys and electronics. People are much more likely to buy if they know it works.
    ~Price things to sell. They suggested at least half of what you paid for the item new…if not lower.

    One thing I would add is to include the date of the sale on your signs, so people don’t assume that it’s an old sign that didn’t get taken down. I do that a lot.

    My friend has a yard sale every spring. The last two years her daughter has made sweet rolls and lemonade the night before and set up her own stand on the lawn. She has made quite a bit of money for herself, especially early in the morning. Many of the early birds leave the house without eating, and they’re more than willing to pay a dollar for a quick breakfast that won’t waste their valuable yard-saleing time.

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