Sale-day toolkit

Garage sale pricing calculator, printable signs & price stickers

Price any item in seconds with the 10–30%-of-retail rule, print a bold GARAGE SALE sign with an arrow, and grab a sticker sheet — free, no signup. July is peak garage sale season, so this weekend counts.

Last updated: July 2026 · Reviewed by the Brixaz team

$
Condition

Suggested sticker price

$50

Typical range: $40$60

Furniture typically resells for 20–30% of retail at a garage sale; condition shifts you inside (or below) that range, capped at 50% of retail. Big pieces earn 2–4× more as a local listing — post them free before sale day.

Big-ticket tip

Items like this often bring 2–4× more as a local listing than on a card table. Post it free first — if it hasn't sold by sale day, sticker it at $50.

Post it free at $100

How the garage sale pricing calculator works

The calculator applies the classic garage-sale rule of thumb — most items sell for 10–30% of their original retail price — with category-specific ranges synthesized from established pricing guides like The Dollar Stretcher and Angi. Clothing sits near the bottom (5–15%), furniture in the middle (20–30%), and tools at the top (30–50%), because tools hold value best. Condition then shifts the range: like-new items earn about 25% above the category range, fair condition about 35% below it, and well-worn items roughly 60% below — always capped at 50% of retail, the realistic garage-sale ceiling. Low-value categories such as books, kids' clothing, and toys skip percentages entirely and use flat price ranges, because that is how they actually sell on a folding table. These are typical ranges, not appraisals — for a supply-based estimate, cross-check with the used furniture value calculator or the listing price checker.

How to price garage sale items

To price a garage sale item, multiply its original retail price by a category percentage — about 10–30% for most goods — then adjust for condition: like-new earns the top of the range, well-worn half the bottom. Round the result to a coin-friendly number like 50¢, $1, or $5 so shoppers pay fast.

Garage sale price = original retail × category % (10–30%) × condition factor → rounded to 25¢ / 50¢ / $1 / $5

Worked example: pricing a $200 coffee table

Say you paid $200 for a coffee table five years ago and it is in good, clean condition:

Original retail price$200
Category range (furniture)20–30% of retail
Condition factor (good)× 1.0
Price range$40 – $60
Suggested sticker price$50

At $50, this is exactly the kind of big-ticket item worth posting as a free local listing first — furniture like this commonly brings $100–$150 from a buyer searching for a coffee table, versus $40–$60 from someone who happened to drive by.

Garage sale pricing guide by item type (2026)

Typical US garage-sale ranges, synthesized July 2026 from The Dollar Stretcher, Angi, and current-season yard sale pricing guides. Treat them as starting points — your neighborhood and the weather set the real market.

Item type% of retailTypical priceTip
Adult clothing5–15%$1–$5 per piece · coats $5–$15New-with-tags or designer pieces can go to 25–40% of retail.
Kids' clothingFlat price$0.50–$3 per pieceBundle outfits or run a fill-a-bag deal — volume beats per-piece profit.
Shoes10–25%$3–$10 per pairClean them first; like-new or designer pairs can fetch up to 40%.
BooksFlat pricePaperbacks $0.50–$1 · hardcovers $1–$3Price by format, not title. "3 for $1" clears kids' books fast.
CDs, DVDs & video gamesFlat priceCDs/DVDs $1–$3 · video games $5–$20Current-generation video games are the exception — look them up first.
Furniture20–30%Sofas $50–$150 · dressers $30–$100Big pieces earn 2–4× more as a local listing — post them free before sale day.
Tools (hand & power)30–50%Hand tools $5–$25 · power tools $10–$50Tools hold value better than almost anything else at a garage sale.
Kitchen items & dishesFlat price$0.50–$5 · complete sets moreSell sets together; single mugs and plates go in the quarter box.
Small appliances20–30%$5–$25 workingKeep an outlet or extension cord handy so buyers can test them.
Large appliances20–30%$75–$250 workingWashers, dryers, and fridges sell far better as local listings with photos.
Electronics (TVs, audio, consoles)10–25%TVs $20–$100 · speakers $5–$40Electronics depreciate fast — must power on, include cords and remotes.
Toys & gamesFlat price$0.25–$3 · ride-ons $5–$20Complete sets with all pieces earn the top of the range.
Baby gear10–25%$5–$30Never resell recalled items — check cpsc.gov/Recalls. Skip expired car seats.
Bikes & sporting goods20–40%Kids' bikes $10–$40 · adult $25–$80Pump the tires and wipe the frame — presentation moves bikes.
Home décor & knickknacksFlat price$0.25–$5 · framed art $2–$25When in doubt, price low — décor is the first thing left over.
Costume jewelryFlat price$0.50–$3Real gold or silver does not belong on a card table — get it appraised.

Selling leftovers on eBay or Mercari afterwards instead? Compare what their fees take with the reseller fee calculator — or skip fees entirely and sell used locally on Brixaz.

Garage sale permits: what 10 major cities require

Garage sale rules are set city by city, not by state. Where permits exist they usually cost $0–$25 and limit you to 2–4 sales per year — Oklahoma City charges $7, San Antonio $16, and Dallas gives the first sale free. Frequency matters even where no permit exists: the Texas Comptroller treats more than two sales in 12 months as a business that needs a sales-tax permit. This sample was verified against official sources in July 2026 — rules change, so confirm with your city hall or code-compliance office before sale day.

CityPermit?FeeLimitsSource
Dallas, TXPermit required1st sale $0; $25 for the 2nd2 per 12 months · up to 3 consecutive days eachdallascityhall.com
Fort Worth, TXPermit required (apply ≥72 h ahead)Per city fee schedule2 per year · up to 3 consecutive days eachFort Worth city code § 5.402
San Antonio, TXPermit required$16 per permit4 per year (1 per quarter) · up to 2 consecutive dayssa.gov
Houston, TXNo city permit$02 per 12 months — more is treated as a business under state tax ruleshoustontx.gov
Oklahoma City, OKPermit required$7 per permit2 per year · 3 consecutive days · 8 a.m.–6 p.m.okc.gov
Wichita, KSLicense required$2.50 per sale day (+$1 online card fee)Licensed per day — buy one for each day of the salewichita.gov
Nashville, TNNo city permit$02 per year · up to 3 days each · no consignment goodsnashville.gov
Phoenix, AZNo city permit$0Zoning allows 2 per 12 months · up to 3 consecutive days eachphoenix.gov
Des Moines, IACheck with the cityNo published citywide rule we could verify (July 2026) — ask the Permit & Development Centerdsm.city
L.A. County (unincorporated), CANo registration on designated weekends$0 on the last full weekend of each month; registration + fee for up to 2 extra weekends a yearWeekends only, 7 a.m.–6 p.m. · no Friday salesplanning.lacounty.gov

This is general information, not legal advice. Many US cities require nothing, some require permits, and rules change — always confirm with your city before posting signs. City garage-sale permits cover in-person sales at your home; posting a free online listing doesn’t need one, though tax rules like the Texas two-sale limit can still apply if you sell often.

Frequently asked questions

How do you price garage sale items?

Price most items at 10–30% of their original retail price. Clothing runs 5–15%, furniture 20–30%, and tools 30–50%; books, kids' clothes, and toys sell best at flat prices under $3. Adjust for condition and round to quarters or whole dollars.

What is the half-price-after-noon rule?

After 12 p.m. on your final day, cut every price 50%. Serious shoppers arrive at opening; afternoon traffic is bargain hunters. A posted "half price after noon" sign clears leftover inventory without haggling item by item.

Do I need a permit to hold a garage sale?

Many US cities require a garage sale permit costing $0–$25, and most limit you to 2–4 sales per year. Dallas, San Antonio, Oklahoma City, and Wichita require one; Houston, Phoenix, and Nashville do not. Check your city hall or code-compliance office first.

Do I have to pay taxes on garage sale money?

Usually no. Personal items sold for less than you originally paid produce no taxable gain under IRS rules on personal-item sales. But frequency can matter: in Texas, holding more than two sales in 12 months can require a state sales-tax permit.

What should you not sell at a garage sale?

Recalled products — reselling them is illegal under federal law, so check cpsc.gov/Recalls before selling cribs, strollers, or toys. Also skip expired or crashed car seats, opened cosmetics, and anything missing safety parts.

What sells best at a garage sale?

Tools, furniture, kids' clothes and toys, kitchen items, and outdoor gear move fastest. Big-ticket furniture, appliances, and electronics usually earn 2–4× more posted as free local listings, where buyers search for the exact item.

Tax details: the IRS explains when personal-item sales are reportable on its Form 1099-K page. Product safety: search CPSC.gov/Recalls before selling any baby gear, cribs, or toys — reselling recalled products is illegal.

Next step

Post the big stuff before sale day

Furniture, tools, appliances, and bikes bring 2–4× more as free local listings than on a card table — $0 fees, no commissions, local pickup. Whatever survives the weekend, list it free or give it away in Free Stuff.

Post