From polished designer consignments to vintage finds and organized seasonal sales, Knoxville offers elegant ways to update your wardrobe and home while keeping quality and value front and center. Expect tidy floors, authentic labels, fair pricing, and helpful staff for a calm, efficient browse.
Let’s get to it.
Outdoor Gear Revival
High-end brands without the high-anxiety price tag. That is the sweet spot at Outdoor Gear Revival, a consignment hub for hikers, campers, climbers, paddlers, and snow-sport lovers. Prices start fair and step down on a set cadence.
Shopping is refreshingly hands-on. The tidy floor often has tents pitched, pads inflated, and stoves simmering, so function is clear. Staff know their stuff, help with boot fit and pack sizing, and the friendly shop dog keeps the vibe easy.
Expect a steady rotation of tents, packs, sleep systems, cookware, technical outerwear, climbing hardware, paddles, fly gear, and small specialty pieces, with the occasional locally made good. Seasonal intake means timing matters, and new arrivals keep the treasure hunt lively.
For consignors, standards are clear. Bring clean, functional gear, they test it, price it, and split about 50 percent by check or 55 percent as store credit. Checks are mailed monthly, typically by the 10th, and you can track balances online. Items follow scheduled markdowns before the consignment clock runs out.
Best for budget-minded adventurers who still demand performance.
The Consignment Shoppe @ Campbell Station
Curated boutique polish meets real-deal consignment at The Consignment Shoppe @ Campbell Station. In Farragut’s Campbell Station area, it feels cozy and well-edited, with racks you can actually navigate and vignettes that make home décor ideas click.
The mix leans women’s apparel and accessories, then branches into home décor, seasonal accents, dishware, framed art, quilts and linens, plus small to mid-size furniture. Expect cleaner, higher-end tags alongside vintage pieces in good condition, not a jumble. Prices land in the mid to boutique range, which suits designer bargain hunters and home stylists.
Turnover is steady, so fresh finds roll in often and seasonal displays move things along. There is a little treasure-hunt energy, yet it never feels chaotic, and the staff keeps the vibe warm and neighborly. Occasional clearance moments sweeten the deal.
Consignment is the model, and the team evaluates for style, condition, and resale value. Since contracts and any buyout options are not posted online, call 865-675-7222 or email theconsignmentshoppe1@gmail.com before bringing larger pieces or to confirm payouts.
If you want variety and quality under one roof, with easy parking and a calm browse, this shop earns a spot on your list.
Retrospect Vintage Store
Think curated, not cluttered. Retrospect Vintage Store treats secondhand like a well-edited gallery, only friendlier.
Vendors run individual booths, each with its own point of view, so the floor reads like a stroll through decades. Expect band tees, sturdy denim, leather jackets, mid-century furniture with real patina, records and audio gear, plus the occasional Y2K flashback. Everything skews clean, wearable, and era-authentic, so you will not wade through bins to find the good stuff.
Pricing sits in that sweet middle, fair for the quality and better than gamble-and-hope thrifting. Staff and regular vendors know their eras, can talk provenance, and steer you toward pieces worth bringing home. Fresh stock rolls in often, and the Retro Flea outdoor events add surprises in warmer months.
Set in Happy Holler along North Central, it pairs nicely with a coffee and a wander past neighborhood murals and studios. Longstanding and locally loved, the shop kept its name and vendor community through new ownership, so the soul remains intact. Buying or selling? They purchase select items outright, with details and splits handled directly with management.
Vintage, Etc- Knoxville
Treasure-hunting gets upgraded at Vintage, Etc- Knoxville. This north Knoxville favorite spreads out in a roomy layout where each vendor booth feels like its own boutique. Tidy aisles and inviting displays set an easy pace that encourages lingering.
Expect a smart mix of vintage clothing, farmhouse and shabby-chic furniture, home décor, small antiques, and collectibles, plus handmade soaps and candles. Prices land comfortably in the budget to mid range, with a few higher-end vintage pieces sprinkled in for the thrill of the find.
Inventory turns over often, so repeat visits pay off. Facebook live sales keep momentum going, including occasional low-price events for bargain hunters. Themed booths rotate to keep the floor fresh and make gift hunting easy.
Staff and vendors come across as helpful, especially if you want styling ideas or help sourcing a piece. Set in Fountain City with easy parking, it pairs nicely with a coffee nearby. If you enjoy curated variety, friendly prices, and a relaxed treasure hunt, this one belongs on your list.
Repeat Boutique
Craving Gucci and Lululemon without the sticker shock? Repeat Boutique leans into elevated resale with a focus on investment pieces that feel worth taking home.
In Bearden, the shop reads like a polished boutique, not a thrift barn. Two tidy floors, clean racks, private parking, and helpful merchandising make for a calm, curated hunt.
Inventory skews women-only, with clothing, shoes, handbags, and accessories. Labels rotate in daily, with Kate Spade, Louis Vuitton, and more in the mix. Designer items are authenticated and everything passes strict quality checks, so browsing feels efficient.
Pricing reflects brand and condition, yet markdown color tags and steady new arrivals keep it interesting. Follow their site or socials for sale notes and seasonal intake dates.
Considering consigning? Intake follows true consignment, with set windows and in-season only. Splits improve as price climbs, about 40 percent for small-ticket items up to 70 percent for high-dollar pieces, and payouts are available monthly, even by mail. Family-run since 1977, the team offers smart guidance on what moves.
Statemint Knoxville
This seasonal pop-up turns a West Knoxville expo hall into a brand-name closet at 50 to 70 percent off. Statemint Knoxville, part of a multi-city series, fills rolling racks with contemporary womenswear and menswear by the thousands, all vetted for condition.
On the floor, expect clothing and accessories only. Think denim, dresses, shoes, and handbags in sizes XXS through 4XL, not furniture or electronics. Items are inspected, so shoppers report clean, current pieces without rips or stains, which keeps the hunt pleasant.
It operates on a true consignment model.
Registered sellers enter inventory, set prices, tag items, and drop them off for the sale, so pricing varies yet leans friendly for mid to premium labels. The event lands a couple of times a year, and presale charity and teacher tickets often open the doors early.
Great fit for brand-conscious bargain hunters who prefer a giant, organized treasure hunt over thrifting roulette. Less compelling if you want one-of-a-kind vintage or a permanent shop you can pop into anytime. When Statemint hits the calendar, it is worth carving out an hour to see what makes it to the racks.
Painted Tree Boutiques Knoxville
Treasure hunt meets boutique polish on Kingston Pike. Painted Tree Boutiques Knoxville gathers hundreds of independently run mini-shops into one bright showroom, so browsing stays lively without losing that upscale touch.
Expect women’s clothing and shoes, plus jewelry, gifts, and artisan finds. Turn a corner and you may hit seasonal décor, small furniture, or a vintage surprise. Some booths feel editorial; others lean delightfully packed.
Not a traditional consignment setup. Vendors lease space and tag items with their IDs while the store runs the registers. Applications are screened, so quality trends up, yet prices land anywhere from thrifty to boutique.
Turnover varies by vendor, with big refreshes near holidays and during themed events. Gift hunting is reliably good, and there is usually a one-of-a-kind accent piece waiting to be scooped up.
Best for shoppers who savor variety and want indie makers alongside stylish resellers in a single stop. Prefer a tightly edited aesthetic? Another shop may fit better. Otherwise, add it to a Kingston Pike outing.