From polished furniture showrooms and curated closets to kid gear that keeps up with the grandkids, the East Valley offers resale gems for every season and budget. Expect tidy floors, fair consignor terms, and finds that make refreshing a wardrobe or a room feel smart and sustainable.
Let’s get to it.
Baby Bargains
Strollers line up like a little motor pool, and the car seats look fresh-from-the-box because staff sanitizes gear before it hits the floor. That alone sets Baby Bargains apart. In Dobson Ranch, this independent spot leans practical yet thoughtful, which is exactly what most of us want when outfitting a nursery or upgrading kid gear.
Expect a full sweep of baby-to-big-kid needs. Maternity pieces, onesies and occasion outfits, nursery furniture, toys, bedding, feeding gear, even breast pumps and media. Inventory turns quickly, so it skews treasure hunt. Some days feel packed and a bit tight, then the next week the mix shifts again.
Prices land mid-range with real savings, especially on gently used clothing and everyday essentials. Near-new strollers or premium brands can sit closer to retail, but the condition is usually the justification.
Selling or clearing out? They take consignments and at times purchase outright. Intake happens in-store; call ahead for current rules and payout details, and plan for possible waits during busy drops. Listings note curbside pickup or delivery options as available, which is handy when naps rule your schedule. Longstanding, local, and focused on safety, it’s a smart first stop before paying full price.
Love Child Resale
Growth spurts meet their match at Love Child Resale. This Tempe boutique keeps baby through teen essentials in steady rotation, from clothing and shoes to toys, books, puzzles, accessories, and useful bits of baby gear.
Instead of cash-for-everything, the shop runs on buy, sell, and trade. Staff accept only clean, current pieces they know will move; accepted items earn roughly 50 percent in-store trade credit, a savvy loop for fast-growing wardrobes.
Shopping feels polished rather than chaotic. Racks are organized by size and type, the space is tidy and friendly, and turnover stays brisk. They review all seasons year-round, so fresh finds land often.
Prices sit in the budget to mid-range sweet spot. Expect name brands and everyday staples without designer shock, plus occasional baby furniture or gear.
Ideal for East Valley caregivers who want value without the rummage and appreciate small-team service; easy parking and that trade credit make outgrowing things feel economical, not wasteful.
Sweet Repeats Clothing Consignment Shop
Mesa’s Sweet Repeats nails that dressed-up feel at down-to-earth prices. Along University Drive, this consignment boutique leans into name brands, women’s sizes XS to 3XL, shoes, plus Coach, Michael Kors, and Dooney & Bourke.
Quality is the point. Pieces are freshly laundered, nearly new, and screened for stains or odors. It is true consignment, not donation thrift, so the edit feels intentional. You will not find prom gowns, just wearable style.
Pricing lands in that happy middle where a designer label finally feels reasonable. New arrivals drop weekly, seasons rotate on cue, and the quarterly clearances plus half-price days are where the real steals happen.
Inside, it feels boutique, with bright paint, new fixtures, mirrors, and tidy racks you can actually browse. The selection is curated, better for a quick treasure hunt than an all-day dig. Follow social for fresh arrivals and sale calendars.
Consignment is organized, with appointments or quick drop and dash, plus big sale events that add children’s gear, toys, and a few home items. Consignors earn a solid split and often get presale perks. Staff experiences trend positive, and the process is clearly structured.
Wang’s Closet
Hype without the hassle is Wang’s Closet’s sweet spot. The Tempe boutique leans into buy, sell, and trade, so the floor stays tight and intentional rather than overstuffed.
On the racks and shelves, think Jordans and Nikes, a sprinkle of Yeezy, and premium streetwear labels like Supreme, Bape, Off-White, and Palace. Mixed in are 70s through 90s graphic tees and lived-in Levi’s denim. Prices run mid to high because condition trends deadstock or near-deadstock, and turnover is quick. New drops hit Instagram, then walk out the door.
Bringing pieces to move? Staff assess market demand and availability on the spot, with immediate buyouts or store credit. Cash offers may trail what online marketplaces sometimes yield, yet credit often stretches further in-store.
The space reads boutique, not warehouse, and that suits shoppers who prefer curation over digging. Some reviewers cheer the finds while others debate pricing and care, so a slow pass and a few questions are wise. Best for gifting a sneakerhead, upgrading a weekend uniform, or hunting a specific vintage tee. Less ideal if a thrift-store bargain hunt is the goal.
Call it New / Call it Antique – Mesa, AZ
Big antique-mall energy with a twist. This Mesa outpost near Broadway and Dobson combines a sprawling dealer marketplace with a staffed consignment zone up front, so you get curated finds and fresh arrivals in one stop.
Mid-century credenzas, farmhouse hutches, painted upcycles, décor, glassware, jewelry, records, comics, kitchenware, linens, plus a dash of newer gently used clothing all share space. Prices span thrift-friendly to collector-grade.
The layout reads like a maze, and it works. Booth curation and tidiness vary, which keeps the hunt lively, and turnover is brisk with consignors feeding in fresh stock. Watch for color-tag promotions and booth sales.
Staff manage pricing and tagging up front and run checkout, so browsing stays easy. Lively, sometimes crowded, with easy parking and a family-friendly crowd. Great for DIY decorators, collectors, and estate shoppers who love the chase.
Consigning here is straightforward. Bring smalls during business hours for review, larger furniture usually starts with photos, and pricing is set with the front desk. Expect regular restock, friendly help loading, and plenty of carts.
Indy Clover Gilbert
Indy Clover Gilbert flips the resale script, letting locals rent a booth and set their own prices while the staff handles checkout. Part marketplace, part boutique, the vibe is distinctly Gilbert.
Rows of seller-run closets deliver variety by the armful: women’s, men’s, and kids’ clothing, shoes, bags, small toys, and home decor. Prices sit in a friendly mid-range, and there are dressing rooms. Booths refresh weekly, and you often catch steep markdowns late week on Thursday and Friday.
Selling is straightforward. Reserve a booth for the week, tag with the provided supplies, and restock as needed. You keep about two-thirds of each sale, expect a small supplies fee around three dollars per week, and payouts arrive via Venmo within a few business days. A tidy app shows sales in real time.
Because items must be clean and shop ready, quality is generally solid, though organization varies by booth and online reviews note occasional hiccups with service or tracking. No large furniture, electronics, or food, so the hunt stays focused on wearables and small accents. Best for treasure-seekers who enjoy a curated rummage and for savvy declutterers who want more control than traditional consignment.
Kid to Kid Gilbert
Growth spurts meet their match at Kid to Kid Gilbert. Quick payouts, tidy racks, and prices that take the sting out of yet another size change.
Expect curated kids’ clothing, shoes, toys, strollers, baby gear, and the occasional nursery piece, all screened for function, recalls, and current style. It reads more boutique than bargain bin, which makes browsing pleasant.
Selling is refreshingly simple. Bring clean, current items and an ID, no appointment needed, and the team appraises on the spot using demand and brand to set offers. Take cash immediately or pick store credit for about 20 percent more. Fair heads up, even nice things can be declined when they are overstocked.
On the buying side, the draw is value. Many pieces land far below retail, often up to about seventy percent off, and turnover is steady, so new finds show up frequently with the seasons and promotions.
It suits budget-minded families and grandparents who keep a spare wardrobe at their house. Convenient in Gilbert for the broader East Valley, and easy to pop in when errands already have you nearby. Prefer polish with your savings? This store fits that lane.
Turn Style Consignment – Chandler Arizona
Racks turn over quickly here, and that is half the fun. Hit the Chandler store early in the week and you will spot fresh drops before the brand-name handbags and small furniture get snapped up.
Women’s fashion leads the floor, though men’s racks, shoes, and accessories hold their own. Expect clean, gently used pieces, plus home decor, linens, and seasonal vignettes that feel boutique rather than rummage. Every so often a designer label or quirky vintage find slips in.
Prices sit in the sweet spot between budget and mid-range, with red-tag and clearance events that sweeten the deal. It is a smart stop for a wardrobe refresh and a living-room lift, all in one run. The East Valley flow keeps variety steady.
Consignors will find clear quality standards: current styles, no heavy wear, working hardware for housewares. Splits and time limits vary by store; some items may be quick-bought at staff discretion. Bring ID, and call ahead about drop-off rules.
A solid fit for tidy treasure-hunters, style-conscious bargain lovers, and resellers who follow their socials for new arrivals. Service levels can fluctuate, but parking is easy and the finds justify the stop.
Turn Style Consignment – Tempe Arizona
It is a two-part treasure hunt: wearable fashion up front, furniture and decor in back. Turn Style Consignment in Tempe lets a sharp blazer share the cart with a sturdy side table, all priced to move.
The floor stays tidy, sizes are easy to browse, and new arrivals land often thanks to steady markdown cycles. Prices sit in the comfortable middle, with plenty of wallet-friendly pieces and the occasional designer handbag or vintage score. Clearance events pop up, so stopping in regularly pays off.
Consignors get a clear, low-lift process. The store sets pricing and manages markdowns, and you choose how to be paid. Typical splits favor store credit over checks, roughly mid 50s versus mid 40s, with better percentages on higher-ticket items. Intake is selective on condition and style, especially for furniture, so bring clean, current pieces.
Who will love it? Shoppers who want a curated hunt without chaos, plus anyone outfitting a room on a real-world budget. Staff attentiveness can ebb and flow, yet the selection and turnover make this Tempe spot a practical staple. With sister locations across the East Valley, it is easy to make a resale loop of it.
My Sister’s Attic
Think polished showroom, not dusty thrift. My Sister’s Attic makes home consignment feel boutique in Chandler, with roomy floors staged in vignettes so scale and style are clear. It is part of a long-running, family-owned brand with several Valley locations and a San Diego outpost.
Expect designer furniture, rugs, lighting, art, mirrors, china, and patio pieces. Prices skew mid to high, trading rock-bottom tags for well-kept, curated choices. Shoppers who value quality over volume tend to see the win.
It runs on consignment. Email photos or bring items in, and the team handles pricing and selling. Items must be clean and like new, usually under 8 to 10 years old with vintage exceptions, and most should retail around 75 dollars or more. Once a piece sells, payouts are immediate, 45 percent in cash or 55 percent in store credit.
Inventory turns quickly, especially after big drop-off days and seasonal refreshes, so repeat visits pay off. Pickup is available for a nominal fee if your pieces are large.
A strong pick for a design-forward home refresh without paying retail. Less thrilling for bargain hunters, ideal for upgrading a space or consigning quality pieces with minimal hassle.