Thrift store inventory can come from a variety of places, not just donations. A single store might take in hundreds or even thousands of items each week. One day, it’s a few racks of overstock, and the next, it’s your back room packed wall to wall.
Sorting and pricing items quickly only helps if you have space to move new inventory onto the floor. And since most items are already priced low, selling them even faster without losing money requires a different approach.
You need clearance strategies that protect your margins and make room for what’s coming in next — without leading you into the red on already discounted items.
This blog covers 10 tactics to help you clear inventory without relying on random markdowns and constant sales.
Let’s dive in.
Traditional retailers run sales so often that it hurts their brand. Customers learn to wait for deeper discounts or start questioning whether the product was ever worth the original price.
Thrift stores don’t have that problem. Secondhand items are already priced below market retail, so customers expect a deal the moment they walk in. Running predictable or frequent sales in this environment can actually add to the excitement. It works alongside the ever-changing nature of thrift inventory, where a “special find” can show up any day. That combination encourages shoppers to come back regularly to hunt for both discounts and unique treasures.
The challenge is that thrift stores rarely have big budgets or extra staff to throw at every sale. You may not always have the funds for new signage each time you launch a promotion, and there might not be enough people on the floor to handle a sudden rush. Your clearance strategy needs to get customers doing some of the heavy lifting — showing up often, finding their own deals, and keeping inventory moving.
Here are 10 clearance strategies designed with thrift stores in mind.
Try these tactics to boost sales and create loyal customers without stretching your budget.
Progressive discounting rewards customers for buying more in a single transaction. The bigger their haul, the bigger the discount. This turns clearance shopping into a game where shoppers hunt for extra pieces to hit the next savings tier — which helps you clear more inventory in one sale.
For example:
You can run progressive discounts for a single category, like winter clothing, or apply them storewide during a clearance event. If someone comes in for a jacket, they might add a hat, scarf, and boots just to reach the next discount level.
It’s especially helpful for thrift stores since it works like impulse purchases at the checkout counter. Customers end up shopping across sections, which moves more product in less time.
Color-tag pricing is one of the simplest ways to clear older stock without constantly reprinting price tags. Each week (or month), you assign a specific color to incoming inventory. Over time, those colors cycle through predetermined discount levels until the items are removed entirely.
Example rotation:
This system takes the guesswork out of markdowns. Staff can discount entire groups of items at once just by knowing the color of the week — and customers quickly learn the cycle, which creates urgency. It also keeps your clearance signage consistent and reusable, saving both labor and supply costs.
Related Read: Color Tag Pricing: Maximizing Turnover Without Losing Profit
Monthly clearance events give you a regular opportunity to move stagnant stock and make room for new donations. Set aside a specific day each month — like the first Wednesday or last Friday — and promote it with in-store signage and social media.
You can keep it simple with $1 bins, “fill-a-bag” deals (more on that below), or “everything on this rack is half off” sales. These consistent events train shoppers to show up, especially bargain hunters.
It also gives your staff a helpful internal rhythm: once a month, clear it out.
When clothing starts piling up, “fill-a-bag” promotions can help clear racks fast. Offer a standard-sized bag (paper grocery bags or branded totes work well), and let customers fill it for a flat fee — $10, $15, or whatever fits your pricing model.
This approach tends to work best for:
It’s also a cost-saver for your store. Moving items this way means you spend less on properly discarding unsellable stock or paying disposal fees for clothing that just doesn’t move.
That said, don’t treat “fill-a-bag” sales as a shortcut to avoid sorting. Even if you price items to sell “as is,” customers notice if the bags are mostly junk or damaged goods. This can hurt your store’s reputation and keep shoppers from coming back. Always maintain the same quality control you do for regular-priced inventory — the sale is designed to feel like a deal, not a dumping ground.
Some items sit too long because they’re easy to overlook — not because they aren’t valuable. Mystery boxes help solve this problem by bundling smaller items together in a fun, low-stakes way. Shoppers love the surprise, and you move more inventory in fewer transactions.
For example, you can create boxes of:
Bundles don’t always have to be a mystery. For seasonal opportunities, you can curate themed sets that make sense for your audience. Around back-to-school season, a “dorm-room essentials” bundle with a lamp, storage bin, hangers, and basic dishes might appeal to budget-conscious students and parents. Before the holidays, you can bundle giftable home goods or create baking kits with pans, mixing bowls, and utensils.
The key is to make the offer feel like a deal while moving hard-to-sell items together. It’s a win for customers who get more for less — and for you, since it frees up shelf space faster.
If your store attracts local resellers or eBay sellers, consider bundling bulk lots of items that haven’t sold individually. These buyers are often looking for low-cost goods they can flip — and you’re looking to make room.
Try selling:
You can advertise these in-store or on community forums like Facebook Marketplace. Just make sure your staff knows how to identify and price the lots consistently.
Clearance pricing doesn’t always need to be deep — sometimes it just needs to feel like a deal. Psychological pricing taps into shopper behavior and helps items sell faster.
Here are a few examples:
The key is visibility. These pricing tactics work best when customers know exactly what they’re getting and how long they have to grab it.
You don’t have to wait until you’re desperate to move old product to start clearance pricing. Planning your markdowns around seasonal and store events helps you stay ahead of the clutter.
Important timing windows:
Having a calendar in place lets your staff prepare and gives you better control over donation flow.
Related Read: Seasonal Donation Patterns: When To Expect Your Best Inventory
It’s tempting to tuck clearance racks away so they don’t interfere with your full-priced merchandise. But hidden clearance doesn’t sell.
Instead:
Some stores even brand these areas — “Bargain Corner” or “Final Finds” — to make them feel intentional rather than leftover.
Even after your best clearance efforts, some inventory still sits. The goal is to make sure those leftovers don’t stay in limbo.
Instead of letting them linger:
Every store needs an off-ramp for unsold goods. Planning ahead keeps your stockroom and sales floor from getting clogged.
Not all discounting helps. In fact, the wrong approach can create more confusion or slow down sales.
Skip these methods:
Every item taking up space is a missed opportunity for something else that would sell.
ThriftCart’s point of sale (POS) system is built specifically for thrift and nonprofit retail — and that includes clearance pricing.
With ThriftCart, you can:
You get a full picture of what’s selling, what’s sitting, and how your clearance strategy is affecting your bottom line.
Request a demo today to see how ThriftCart helps thrift stores price smarter and move inventory faster.