Refining your home and wardrobe can be elegant and economical with the right consignment stops. Around Phoenix, curated shops and services offer quality furniture, designer labels, children’s essentials, and estate services at prices that make sense.
Let’s get to it.
Rewind Consignment & Vintage
Mid-century finds here feel freshly pulled from a well-edited design magazine, only priced for real life. In the Melrose district, Rewind Consignment & Vintage caters to design lovers who want character without antique-dealer sticker shock.
Rooms unfold into vignettes, then a basement and an outdoor nook, each grouped by era or mood. Expect sculptural lighting, teak and walnut furniture, tiki and Southwestern accents, plus art, vinyl, comics, handbags, jewelry, and the occasional small antique.
That breadth is curated, not cluttered. Clean, undamaged, era-true inventory moves fast, so the old rule applies: if you see it, get it. Prices land mid-range to collectible, and staff will often discuss larger-piece pricing or delivery options.
Deal-hunters appreciate periodic markdowns as consignment windows age, yet quality stays high. Rewind’s online posts tease new arrivals rather than a full catalog, which keeps the treasure-hunt feel intact.
Sellers get straightforward terms, generally a 50-50 split for about 90 days, with checks cut on the 15th after a sale, mailing available for a small fee. Prefer cash now? They do select buyouts on the spot. Knowledgeable, friendly owners keep the edit tight, and it shows.
Retro Ranch
Serious curation meets playful clutter at Retro Ranch. Along the Melrose curve, this small, multi-room shop is packed tight and styled smart, so browsing feels like a guided treasure hunt. The vibe skews indie and nostalgic, not a sterile showroom.
Merch runs deep: authentic mid-century furniture and decor, glassware and kitchenware, women’s vintage with select men’s pieces, rockabilly and graphic tees, jewelry, vinyl, even hi-fi and quirky ephemera. Seasonal displays and constantly refreshed windows keep the mix lively, and the rarer pieces tend to vanish quickly.
Pricing spans friendly knick-knacks to premium MCM credenzas. The common thread is condition. They prioritize clean, wearable clothing and working or fixable goods, so you are paying for quality rather than thrift-store roulette. Look for occasional markdowns, yet the real win is the one-of-a-kind score.
Thinking of selling? They operate on curated consignment, set the prices, and pay after items sell. Details are handled in-store. Staff know their eras and materials, though service can feel brisk on busy days. Plan time, since this is not a dash-in stop. There is a small private lot, and stock turns often.
Another Time Around Furniture Consignment aka Eclectica Home Furniture
Price tags that quietly shrink are part of the charm at Another Time Around Furniture Consignment, also called Eclectica Home Furniture. In the Bell Rd retail corridor, a spacious, climate-controlled floor is staged in tidy room vignettes. Organized, welcoming, and easy to browse.
Expect real furniture. Living, dining, and bedroom sets, name-brand mattresses, rugs and lamps, plus a steady stream of accents. Newer labels mingle with vintage one-offs, so prices range from budget-friendly to solid mid-range, with the occasional splurge.
They buy outright or consign. The split is 50 percent, the contract runs 90 days, and markdowns start around day 30 then deepen by day 60. Clean, functional pieces only. Email photos to consign@anothertimearoundfurniture.com for a quick review, often within a day, or bring items in. Checks mail by the 15th of the next month.
Shoppers get steady turnover and a clean, staged setting that makes decisions easier. Delivery and pickup are available for a fee. Staff knowledge earns good marks overall, though experiences can vary. If you favor unique finds and value that improves with time, add this stop to your route.
Remoov
This is the rare resale service that shows up with a truck, takes the lot, and turns your clutter into a dashboard with payouts.
Remoov focuses on estate cleanouts and downsizing across the Valley. Crews assess at pickup, and furniture, rugs, art, appliances, electronics, clothing, and seasonal decor are all fair game. Estate-size collections are welcome.
The model is mostly consignment or auction, with an upfront truck fee and roughly a 50 percent seller split. Clean pieces go online. Fragile or heavily worn items are donated or recycled, which keeps things moving but may surprise anyone expecting every item to sell.
Shopping happens through online listings, not a boutique floor. The result is a broad mix, from budget secondhand to mid and high-end finds, with new batches in waves. Some items sell quickly, others linger in processing, and pricing can feel hit or miss.
Choose this if convenience ranks higher than speed or showroom polish. Estate executors and movers benefit most. If you want a fast cash buyout or an afternoon of browsing, this will not scratch the itch. For a stress-light cleanout with resale potential, Remoov makes sense.
Poor Little Rich Girl
Start with boutique polish, add consignment smarts, and you get a closet upgrade without the retail sting. Poor Little Rich Girl focuses on women’s contemporary and designer pieces in like-new shape, kind to the budget.
Racks are tidy and curated, so browsing feels easy. Expect gently used to like-new clothing, shoes, handbags, sunglasses, and jewelry, with a small edit of gifts and locally made soaps or baubles sprinkled in.
Prices sit in the mid to higher-end consignment range, a sweet spot when the labels skew designer. Inventory flips quickly, with new arrivals highlighted on social, which keeps finds fresh and makes repeat visits worthwhile. Seasonal refreshes and occasional markdowns add to the fun.
Consigning is straightforward, with in-store intake and clear contracts. Payouts can be cash or store credit. Select items may be bought outright or traded toward future finds, depending on brand and timing. Staff know labels and sizing, and they offer styling help that respects your taste. The Bethany Home Road strip adds a neighborhood boutique feel, perfect for an unhurried browse between coffee stops.
Hissyfits
Tiny wardrobes outgrow budgets quickly. Hissyfits softens the sting with a boutique take on kids consignment that stays stylish and practical.
Set along the North Central 7th Street corridor, the shop feels curated, not cluttered. Expect gently used, brand-name clothing, toys, gear, and small furniture, plus a sprinkle of new gifts. Seasonal turnover keeps the treasure hunt lively. Free parking helps.
Consignment terms favor families who like to trade up. Staff sets prices, and consignors get 55 percent as store credit or half that in cash. High-value pieces may go on eBay with the same split. Most contracts run about 60 days, after which unsold items are donated with a receipt, or reclaimed on select higher-priced items for a small fee.
Selectivity keeps quality high, and standout labels surface often. Service can run brisk on busy days, yet the long-running shop is active on Instagram and drops the occasional steep clearance. Best for parents and grandparents who prefer curated finds and strong trade value over rock-bottom prices. Expect to leave with pieces that look fresh, not fussy, and a plan for the next growth spurt.
Sweet Repeats Clothing Consignment – Tempe
Clean racks, no musty surprises, and price tags that feel fair. Sweet Repeats in Tempe leans curated rather than chaotic, which makes browsing easy. Women’s clothing, shoes, and handbags headline the floor, with the occasional Coach or Michael Kors piece slipping in at wallet-kind prices.
Here is the twist that sets it apart. During its big sale events, children’s and baby gear join the mix, even nursery furniture and toys. That makes it a smart stop for grandparents helping stock a nursery, or anyone who wants quality without paying brand new.
Set in a convenient Tempe strip center near ASU, it draws both students and nearby neighborhoods. There is a sister shop in Mesa if the cross-town run is simpler.
Because the store works on a consignor model, intake is selective. Nearly new only, inspected before it hits the floor, so the racks stay tidy and current. Inventory turns quickly, and seasonal sales with half-price windows are announced on their site and socials, so timing can pay off.
Great fit for value hunters who prefer a clean, organized browse over a dig-for-gold experience. Expect mid-range prices, steady variety, and the chance to refresh a closet or a nursery without the sticker shock.
Urban Exchange
In Scottsdale, Urban Exchange proves resale can feel like a boutique. The focus is on intention, not volume, and it shows from the first rack.
The selection leans designer and the presentation is polished. Expect gently used women’s apparel, luxury-leaning handbags and shoes, plus the occasional vintage or home accent that feels special rather than random. Staff know their labels and guide without hovering.
Prices land in that sweet spot where high-end feels attainable. You will pay less than new, but the standards stay high, so splurges feel justified.
Editing a closet? Walk in for a quick review. Standard pieces often net around 30 percent in cash, while select handbags can earn more. Trade typically stretches further at about 50 percent in store credit. Prefer consignment? Many items split near 50 percent cash or 60 percent store credit once they sell, and checks are easy to pick up.
Turnover is steady, so the treasure hunt stays fresh, and their Instagram highlights new arrivals before they vanish. Periodic sales add a little thrill. If you gravitate toward brand-name finds in a clean, curated space, this shop delivers. If rock-bottom thrift is the goal, it may feel too refined.
Call it New / Call it Antique – Mesa, AZ
Two experiences under one very big roof: an antique mall of hundreds of dealer booths paired with a staffed consignment and resale center. It feels like a field trip for your home.
Expect a true hunt. The footprint sprawls for tens of thousands of square feet, with aisles that zigzag from pristine, curated mid-century setups to quirky, rummage-style corners.
Prices swing from bargain-friendly to mid-range. Daily replenishment keeps the shelves lively, and booth sales or color-tag promos pop up regularly.
Merchandise runs the gamut. Vintage furniture, farmhouse and retro decor, painted and upcycled pieces, glass and lamps, kitchenware, records, books and DVDs, toys and tools, even newer household items like TVs or sofas when they pass the store’s clean and working test.
Considering consigning? Staff handle intake, set pricing, and pay out in cash at 50 percent for furniture and 45 percent for most other goods, with small-drop days and appointments for larger loads.
Best for patient browsers, DIY tinkerers, and home stylers who appreciate variety over uniformity. If you enjoy wandering, comparing, and spotting value, Call it New / Call it Antique in Mesa earns a place on the shortlist.