Refresh your wardrobe and home with distinctive finds that deliver quality, value, and a lighter footprint. In Seattle, consignment and resale shops offer attentive service, trusted curation, and savings on everything from timeless clothing with fit that flatters to outdoor gear and well crafted furniture.
Let’s get to it.
Bon Voyage Vintage
Color-splashed racks and high ceilings set the mood, yet the edit is what hooks you. This Pioneer Square boutique treats 1950s through 1990s style like a living collection, wearable now and full of character.
Expect vintage-authentic clothing, shoes, and graphic tees, then stay for small home gifts, local art prints, and handmade jewelry. Prices land mid-range, with the rare standout commanding more. It feels more boutique than thrift, which means less sifting, better condition, and a friendly, owner-run vibe.
Inventory moves quickly thanks to rotating vendor booths and an active online shop, with fresh drops and First Thursday Art Walk giving shoppers a reason to swing back. That rhythm keeps sizes and styles circulating, so repeat visits pay off when you have a specific decade in mind.
Shoppers who want standout pieces and smart gifts will feel at home. Bargain hunters chasing volume may prefer a different stop.
Thinking of selling? The shop blends outright buys with vendor and rotating-stock arrangements. Policies aren’t posted, so call or DM to ask about consignment terms and current availability.
Two Big Blondes Plus Size Consignment
Fit comes first here, which is why Two Big Blondes has been a quiet powerhouse for plus-size style since 1997. In the Central District, the roomy, well-organized floor and accessible fitting rooms make browsing relaxed.
Sizes run 14 to 9X, with shoes 8 and up.
Everything is curated for condition and wearability, so you see clean, current pieces. Expect everyday staples, lingerie and maternity, plus a dedicated designer section for a high-fashion thrill. Seasonal outerwear and swim rotate in, and there is often a dash of vintage.
Prices usually land at a quarter to half of original retail, with occasional couture higher. The big storewide sales and twice-yearly bag blowouts are real budget wins. Inventory turns fast, with fresh arrivals daily and a wishlist that alerts you when a hard-to-find piece drops.
Consigning is straightforward. Items are tracked for roughly 100 days, you keep about 40 percent, and payouts happen when you request them. Unsold pieces may support the Seattle Women’s Assistance Fund, keeping the community focus strong. A smart stop if you want real choice, respectful fit, and the thrill of a designer gem without the price.
Wonderland Gear Exchange
Technical gear without the sticker shock. That’s the draw at Wonderland Gear Exchange in Fremont. It runs on consignment, yet the selection feels curated, not chaotic, and pricing lands well below retail.
Backpacks, tents, sleeping bags, skis and snowboards, even commuter and gravel bikes rotate through. Layers for every season, from base to belay jacket, plus boots and accessories. Families appreciate the kids section, which makes growing out of last year’s snow pants less painful. Every so often, new sample pieces appear for a nice surprise.
Selling is straightforward. Book a quick appointment, bring up to 25 clean, current items, and the store handles pricing. Items stay at least 60 days, and payout tiers scale from around 30 percent to as high as 80 on premium sales. Choose store credit for a 10 percent bump, or request cash, check, or electronic payout.
The shop is clean and modern with clear size and technical categories, so browsing is easy and relaxing. Staff generally know their stuff, and turnover is brisk. Watch their Gear Feed and seasonal sales if value is the main goal. If affordable outdoor adventure is on your agenda, this one earns a spot on the short list.
Cherry Consignment
Boutique polish with neighborhood warmth, Cherry Consignment turns closet clean-outs into style upgrades. In West Seattle along California Ave SW, it reads more like a small fashion studio than a resale shop.
Racks are curated and tidy, with women’s clothing, outerwear, shoes, purses, plus a well-edited lineup of jewelry, scarves, and hats. Pricing sits mid-range to higher for boutique-quality without designer sticker shock. Treasure-hunt vibe, never rummage.
Consigning is by appointment, usually up to about 20 items, and intake runs on seasonal windows. Items get 60 days on the floor, so selections turn over briskly. They prioritize freshly laundered, gently used, current styles; no stains, pilling, odors, or pet hair, and fast-fashion labels rarely make the cut.
Store credit is 40 percent when an item sells, a lower check is available after the contract. Consignors log in to track sales. Unclaimed pieces are donated.
Shoppers who like a clean edit and boutique service will feel at home. Locally owned since the late 2000s, it leans community-first, and the website lays out FAQs and booking. A smart, low-waste way to refresh a wardrobe.
Labels Consignment
Labels Consignment hits a sweet spot, with clean racks, real labels, and price tags that don’t make your eyes water.
Phinney Ridge brings the cozy boutique version, curated and calm. Bellingham stretches into multiple rooms with housewares and a little furniture alongside the main event, women’s clothing, shoes, handbags, and accessories. Vintage and designer pieces pop in regularly.
Most items run 50 to 80 percent below retail. It is smart shopping for elevated basics, with the occasional showpiece. The space stays polished, not fussy, so the treasure hunt feels refreshingly grown up.
Consigning is straightforward. Bring clean, current pieces during intake hours, no appointment required. They are selective and seasonal, with daily limits. Expect a standard agreement, about 40 to 50 percent payout after sale and roughly a 60 day term with markdowns.
Turnover is brisk, and new finds arrive often. Follow Instagram, use the consignor portal, and let the staff steer you if you want styling help. If sustainability and variety top your list, Labels belongs on it.
Beats and Bohos
A record bin meets a well-edited closet, and somehow it feels chic rather than crowded. Beats and Bohos, run by longtime local sellers, channels Seattle’s countercultural streak with equal parts vinyl and vintage, so a first-press LP and a 60s jacket can leave together.
The shop is compact yet calm, with clear tags and gallery-style displays. A tidy treasure hunt. Boots, band tees, furniture, art, handmade jewelry, and apothecary pieces are curated with an eye for quality, and the staff knows fabrics and pressings.
Prices span mid-range to collectible, with the condition to match. Expect authentic pieces from the 40s to 90s plus LPs, 45s, and 78s. They buy clothing and records outright, walk-ins welcome; consignment is reserved for standout older furniture or high-value vintage after staff evaluation, and only clean, well-kept items make the cut.
Stock turns fast thanks to local buys and sourcing trips, and Instagram is the place to catch new drops and record nights. If you favor quality over volume and like the Greenwood and Phinney Ridge stroll, this music-meets-fashion gem belongs on your short list.
Zelda Zonk Consignment
Quality control is the quiet star at Zelda Zonk Consignment. The team keeps a tight edit, so racks hold current pieces, gently loved, freshly laundered, and free of mystery odors. No damaged castoffs here, which makes browsing quick and gratifying.
Expect a compact, tidy boutique with women’s clothing, handbags, shoes, hats, jewelry, and scarves. Vintage gems mingle with contemporary name brands, all organized by size and style. Prices sit in the mid-range, with the happy surprise of the occasional designer score.
Selling? It runs on traditional consignment by appointment. Bring brand name, recent, season-appropriate items. Terms are simple. Forty percent back on items under 199 dollars, fifty percent on 200 and up, plus a one-time 5 dollar account setup taken from sales. The consignment period is 60 days, pricing and markdowns are at the store’s discretion, and you can track everything online.
In West Seattle’s Admiral district, it fits a quick pop in between errands, yet rewards a slower treasure hunt too. New arrivals land regularly, so the selection moves. Service skews professional, sometimes brisk. If you appreciate a curated closet without mall chaos, this spot will feel like time well spent.
Ballard Consignment Store
Start with midcentury lines beside Danish teak, then add a Persian rug and a gleaming arc lamp. Ballard Consignment keeps it home focused, and it works.
A sprawling, warehouse-style showroom in Ballard is staged in vignettes, so you can see how pieces play together while you meander. Furniture rules the roost, with artwork, lighting, rugs, and tasteful decor, plus a little houseware and the occasional vintage jacket.
Pricing sits mid to higher, yet the value is clear. Many items are consigned, some are new or white-label, and the curation leans quality, not quantity. Stock turns fast, so it is a buy-when-you-see-it situation, helped along by periodic promos and clearance tags.
The crowd skews design-minded locals and homeowners, which keeps the vibe lively. Staff can be wonderfully resourceful with dimensions and pairing ideas, although attention varies on busy weekends. Delivery options are available, making big pieces less daunting.
Considering consigning? They favor gently used, better-made pieces and have a straightforward split that sellers speak well of. Call ahead with details. If your priority is refreshing a room with character and skipping full retail, this is an easy yes; if you want racks of clothing, not so much.
Dixon’s Furniture
Prices stay friendly and the wood is real. In Beacon Hill, Dixon’s Furniture operates like a warehouse showroom with constant movement, the kind of place where a Victorian sideboard might sit beside a contemporary sofa. Inventory spans eras and it turns over quickly.
Stock typically includes sofas, beds and mattresses, dressers, dining sets, lamps, and plenty of home accents. Pieces are clean and usable, with recent mattresses showing up from time to time. Think midcentury, Victorian, contemporary, art deco, and a little eclectic mixed in for fun.
Buying and selling is their bread and butter, with consignment available by email photo submission. Expect straightforward, sometimes conservative offers on items the shop chooses to buy outright, so set expectations accordingly and ask questions about terms before you haul anything over.
A longtime Seattle spot dating back to the early 1990s, Dixon’s suits budget to mid-range shoppers who prefer sturdy, older construction over designer labels. Check in often, because good pieces disappear fast. Delivery is available for a small fee, assembly can be arranged at times, and credit cards are welcome. For a practical treasure hunt that skips fast furniture fatigue, this is a solid stop.
Found Interiors
The thrill here is finding a Restoration Hardware sofa at thrift-adjacent prices, then spotting the perfect lamp three steps later. Found Interiors curates designer-grade furniture and decor; brands often span Restoration Hardware, Pottery Barn, and Crate & Barrel, with the occasional bespoke piece.
Expect sofas, case goods, dining tables, rugs, framed art, and lighting. Add sculptural vases, plus the occasional vintage collectible or custom one-off.
Inventory turns quickly, with deliveries and new arrivals most days, which keeps the treasure hunt lively. Prices land in that mid-to-high-end consignment sweet spot, meaning real savings over retail without sacrificing quality. The boutique sits in a historic building along Kirkland’s Market Street, the layout is easy to navigate, and parking nearby is straightforward. Follow Instagram or stop in often; the best finds tend to vanish.
Shoppers often note a helpful team and a tidy floor; timing can be hit or miss when a hot item is in motion, so move decisively. The shop operates primarily on consignment, and standards are high. Have a piece to sell? Contact the store for current intake and payout details.
Ragamoffyn’s Womens Consignment Store
Labels take center stage at Ragamoffyn’s, where downtown Kirkland’s boutique energy meets consignment smarts. High-end wardrobes get a second act without the fuss.
The selection leans designer, with curated womenswear, accessories, and a strong handbag game. Luxury bags are authenticated and priced in-store, which cuts the guesswork. Pieces are gently used and ready to wear, presented in tidy displays that feel like a specialty shop. Pricing lands mid to high, often 20 to 50 percent below original retail, so value shows up in fabric, cut, and condition.
It suits shoppers who want quality and polish, not a rummage. New arrivals hit often, and the team highlights fresh finds online. Seasonal rotations keep the floor current, while sale corners and markdown rooms move past-season pieces along.
Consigning here is selective, with a typical 50-50 split and intake windows that favor appointments. Expect branded labels to fare best. The staff is knowledgeable, and the footprint is small to medium, which makes browsing easy. If your wishlist skews to designer with accountability and order, Ragamoffyn’s earns a spot on your Kirkland stroll.