I'm wearing a Madewell denim jacket right now that cost me $6.50 at Goodwill. The retail price tag was still attached: $128. This isn't an anomaly; it's a Tuesday. My closet is roughly 70% secondhand, and people regularly compliment outfits they assume I paid full price for.
Thrifting has a perception problem. People picture dusty racks of stained polo shirts and mom jeans from 1997. And sure, some of that exists. But the secondhand market has exploded in the past five years, driven by sustainability-conscious millennials and Gen-Z shoppers, and the quality of inventory at many thrift stores is better than it's ever been.
Here's my honest guide to finding great stuff without making thrifting a second job.
Know Which Stores to Hit
Not all thrift stores are created equal, and inventory quality varies dramatically by location and store type.
Goodwill and Salvation Army are the workhorses. Inventory is vast and constantly rotating, which means the selection changes every time you visit. The downside is inconsistency — you might find nothing one week and three incredible pieces the next. Tip: stores in wealthier neighborhoods consistently receive better donations. A Goodwill in an affluent suburb will have a fundamentally different selection than one in a rural area.
Consignment stores (Buffalo Exchange, Plato's Closet, local consignment shops) pre-screen their inventory. Items are inspected for quality, condition, and brand appeal before being accepted. This means a higher hit rate but also higher prices — still well below retail, but you're paying $12-25 per item instead of $4-8.
Estate sales and church rummage sales are underrated. The vintage finds tend to be here — quality leather goods, classic wool coats, kitchenware that outlasts anything you'd buy new.
When to Go
Timing matters more than most people realize. The best day to thrift at Goodwill-type stores is typically the day after they restock, which varies by location but is often midweek — Tuesday through Thursday. Weekends are picked over by Saturday afternoon.
Seasonal timing also applies. Late January and early February bring a wave of donations from people cleaning out closets as a New Year's resolution. Late August through September brings back-to-school donation surges. And the weeks after major holidays — especially January and July — produce some of the best inventory I've found all year.
Many thrift stores also run weekly color-tag sales where all items with a certain color tag are 50% off. At my local Goodwill, the tag rotation changes weekly. Learning the schedule means you can time your visit to hit the half-off day for maximum savings.
What to Look For
Quality matters more than brand at thrift stores, because you're paying so little that even a moderate-quality piece is a deal. Here's what I check:
Fabric content. Flip to the care label and check the material. Natural fibers — cotton, wool, linen, silk — tend to last longer and look better than synthetic blends. A 100% cotton button-down for $4 will outlast a polyester blend from a fast-fashion retailer at $25.
Construction quality. Check seams (are they straight and double-stitched?), buttons (are they securely attached?), and zippers (do they move smoothly?). These details separate quality garments from disposable ones.
Condition. Check for stains, holes, pilling, and wear around the collar and cuffs. Light pilling is fixable with a fabric shaver ($10 on Amazon). Stains and holes usually aren't worth the effort.
Fit is forgiving. A slightly oversized blazer can be tailored for $20-30, which combined with a $7 thrift purchase gives you a fitted, quality blazer for $30 total — still far less than new. I've found that buying one size up and getting it tailored produces better results than trying to find a perfect fit off the rack.
Categories That Thrift Especially Well
Denim. Quality denim barely degrades with use. Levi's, Madewell, Wrangler, and other durable jean brands are ubiquitous at thrift stores. I own six pairs of Levi's, all thrifted, none over $8.
Outerwear. Coats, blazers, and jackets hold their value and construction well. A wool peacoat that originally sold for $200 will last another decade after you buy it for $12 at a thrift store.
Kitchenware. Cast iron pans, ceramic dishes, quality cutting boards, and solid kitchen tools are consistently underpriced at thrift stores. I found a Le Creuset Dutch oven last year for $14. They retail for over $300.
Books. Obvious, but worth mentioning. Hardcovers for $1-2 versus $28 new.
Categories to Skip
Shoes are hit or miss. They mold to the previous owner's foot, and the soles show wear quickly. Exceptions: barely-worn boots and dress shoes from quality brands.
Underwear and swimwear — for obvious reasons. Electronics — too high a failure risk without a return policy. Mattresses and upholstered furniture — potential hygiene issues.
Making Thrifting Efficient
The biggest complaint about thrift shopping is that it takes too long. Compared to walking into Target and buying exactly what you need in your size, yes — thrifting requires more time. But there are ways to make it efficient.
Go with a mental list of what you're looking for. "I need a black blazer and a pair of dark jeans" is a filter that lets you move quickly past everything else.
Head straight to your size section. Skip sizes you don't wear, even if something catches your eye — if it doesn't fit, it won't get worn.
Set a time limit. Give yourself 30-45 minutes. Browse deliberately, check quickly, and leave. The people who burn out on thrifting are the ones who spend three hours every Saturday in the store.
Try everything on. Thrift stores don't have standardized sizing, and the variety of brands means a "medium" from 2015 and a "medium" from 2023 might fit very differently.
The Bigger Picture
Beyond the savings — which are real and substantial — thrift shopping is one of the simplest ways to reduce textile waste. The fashion industry produces roughly 92 million tons of textile waste annually. Buying secondhand extends the life of garments that would otherwise end up in landfills, which makes the environmental case as compelling as the financial one.
I save an estimated $2,000-3,000 per year by thrifting the majority of my wardrobe. My style hasn't suffered — if anything, it's improved, because thrift stores force you to be creative and intentional instead of defaulting to whatever fast fashion puts in front of you.
Give it three visits before you decide it's not for you. The first trip is always the hardest. By the third, you'll know where to look, what to skip, and how to spot a $128 jacket hanging on a rack with a $6.50 price tag.