My neighbor is having a multi-family yard sale this weekend. This will be my first one! I've done other little sales at our church or local yearly town event but most of the stuff that I sold was made. This is all stuff that I want gone. I want to get rid of it but at the same time I would like to make a fair dollar. I just am not sure as to how much to charge for things. Does anyone know of a website that will give any rules of thumb or things that usually sell well. Thanks.
General rules of thumb:
Price things around 10% of their new value.
Things that're genuinely new /still in the box can be priced a little higher, but not more than 25% the cost of new -- not if you want to get rid of them.
Price your good condition kids' clothes.
Put stained /worn things into a pile and sell them for .25/item or $1.00/bag.
Adult clothes (with the possible exception of coats and other large items) should never be priced more than $1 -- people just won't pay it. Don't bother with outdated clothes; no one will buy a 1980s prom dress, even it's priced cheaply. If you have things that're genuinely worth something (i.e., a set of barely-used ski bibs) consider putting them on ebay or in a consignment store. There you'll have a larger audience and will get a better price; at a yard sale you're hoping that the right customer will come along in the small time frame you've allotted for the sale.
Kids books will move at .25 each.
Set the price at whatever you want to get. Most people will not negotiate -- they'll just leave.
Run an electrical cord out your door so people can test things.
Do not allow anyone in your house for any reason, even supervised by another family member. Some of these people are pros and are there to steal. For example, one may go into the bathroom and "camp out" while the other asks you about pictures on your wall, etc. And while you're distracted, the one in the bathroom comes out and walks around your house unsupervised. If they insist that they MUST try on an item of clothing, just say no. If they can't risk $1, then you'll just have to give up that sale. It isn't worth letting people into your house.
Place your big items out in front to attact people.
Group things into organized piles: Clothing to the left, household goods to the right, books in the middle.
Get a fanny pack to hold your change. Even at yard sales, some people are dishonest.
Good luck with your sale. Personally, I gave up on yard sales after a bad experience last time. A group was absolutely determined that they were going to get into my house -- kept sending their kids running up my steps, while at the same time their parents were trying to shove plates into a box underneath some glasses. They tried to pretend they didn't understand English, but when I started RAISING the prices, they suddenly understood every word I said. Finally I told them that they had to leave, and I would not sell them anything. When they wouldn't leave, I had to send my kids in to get their dad, who came out and sat on the steps looking mean.
Now we just give things to Goodwill, and I think we do just as well.