Retail arbitrage sounds fancy but it's simple: buy stuff on clearance at Target, flip it on eBay for double. While everyone's hunting thrift stores, smart flippers are hitting clearance sections at retail stores and making consistent profit. Here's how to do it right.
What Is Retail Arbitrage?
You buy products from retail stores (Target, Walmart, CVS) at a discount and resell them online for more than you paid. The profit comes from timing, location differences, and knowing what sells.
Example: Target clearances out a LEGO set for $15 (originally $50). You buy it, list it on eBay for $35, and pocket $15 after fees and shipping. Repeat that 10 times a week and you've made $150.
Which Stores Have the Best Clearance?
Target (The Gold Standard)
Target's clearance system is flippers' favorite for good reason:
- Predictable markdown schedule: Items go 15% → 30% → 50% → 70% off over weeks
- Wide product range: Toys, electronics, clothing, home goods, beauty
- Good brands: LEGO, Nintendo, Apple, Dyson — stuff that holds resale value
Best clearance sections: Toys (especially after holidays), seasonal decor, electronics, kids' clothing.
When to shop: Wednesday mornings (new markdowns drop). End of season (winter clearance in February, summer in August).
Walmart
Walmart's clearance is hit or miss, but when you find deals, they're good.
- Yellow clearance stickers: Look for items with yellow tags in every aisle
- Seasonal endcaps: Holiday items, back-to-school, garden supplies
- Toys and electronics: Check the toy section weekly for markdowns
Walmart's clearance doesn't follow Target's predictable schedule, so you have to check more often.
HomeGoods / TJ Maxx / Marshalls
These stores buy overstock and discontinued items from brands, so everything's already discounted. Look for:
- Name-brand kitchen appliances (KitchenAid, Cuisinart)
- Designer home decor
- Brand-name beauty products
Scan items because pricing is inconsistent. Sometimes they overprice, sometimes you find steals.
CVS / Walgreens
Drugstore clearance is underrated. Look for:
- Beauty products (makeup, skincare)
- Seasonal items (Valentine's candy, Halloween decor)
- Toys and games (check after holidays)
CVS has a 90% clearance section in some stores. Check the back endcaps.
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Scan It Now — Free →What to Look For on Clearance
Items That Hold Value
Not all clearance is worth flipping. You want items that still have strong demand even though the store is marking them down.
- LEGO sets: Always profitable. Buy on clearance, sell at full price online.
- Video games: Nintendo games especially. They rarely drop in value.
- Brand-name toys: Hot Wheels, Barbie, action figures (especially collector editions)
- Small electronics: Bluetooth speakers, phone accessories, smart home devices
- Seasonal items (off-season): Christmas decor in January, Halloween in November
Items to Avoid
- Generic brands: Store-brand items don't resell well. Stick to name brands.
- Clothing (usually): Unless it's a hot brand like Nike or Champion, retail clearance clothing has thin margins.
- Bulky items: Furniture, big appliances. Shipping kills your profit.
- Perishables or dated products: Food, makeup with expiration dates — risky.
The Scanning Strategy
Don't buy clearance blindly. Just because it's 70% off doesn't mean it's profitable.
Step 1: Find clearance item. Check the price.
Step 2: Scan it with PicZFlip or eBay to check sold listings. You need to know:
- What's it selling for online?
- How fast does it sell? (Check how many sold in last 30 days)
- What are the fees? (eBay ~13%, Amazon ~15%, Poshmark ~20%)
Step 3: Do the math. If you buy it for $10 and sell for $30:
- Selling price: $30
- Fees (13%): -$3.90
- Shipping (if you cover it): -$5
- Cost: -$10
- Net profit: $11.10
Is $11 profit worth your time? If it sells fast (under a week), yes. If it takes a month, maybe not.
Best Times to Shop Clearance
After major holidays: Christmas (December 26-January), Halloween (November 1), Valentine's (February 15), Easter (day after).
Stores need to clear seasonal inventory fast. You'll find 70-90% off deals.
End of season: Winter clearance in February, summer clearance in August. Stores make room for new seasonal stock.
Back-to-school season (late August-September): School supplies, backpacks, and dorm items get marked down after the rush.
Weekday mornings: New markdowns often happen overnight. Hit stores early before other flippers grab the good stuff.
Common Clearance Mistakes
Buying because it's cheap, not because it's profitable: A $2 item that sells for $8 nets you $3 after fees. That's not worth storing and shipping. Focus on $15+ profit items.
Hoarding inventory: Don't buy 50 of the same item unless you've already sold it multiple times. Storage costs (or just clutter) aren't worth it.
Ignoring fees and shipping: Retail arbitrage margins are tight. Always factor in eBay/Amazon fees and shipping costs before buying.
Not checking return policies: If you buy something that doesn't sell, can you return it? Target lets you return clearance. Know your backup plan.
Retail Arbitrage vs Thrifting
Retail arbitrage pros: Predictable inventory, items are new in box, faster to source.
Retail arbitrage cons: Lower profit margins, more competition, stores limit quantities sometimes.
Thrifting pros: Higher profit margins (buy for $5, sell for $50), unique finds, less competition.
Thrifting cons: Unpredictable inventory, used condition, takes longer to source quality items.
Best strategy? Do both. Hit Target clearance on Wednesdays, thrift stores on weekends. Diversify your sourcing.
Scaling Clearance Flipping
Once you've proven a few items flip well, you can scale:
- Visit multiple locations: Same chain, different stores have different clearance. Check 3-4 Targets in your area.
- Buy multiples: If a LEGO set flips for $20 profit and Target has 5 of them, buy all 5. That's $100.
- Focus on winners: Track what sells fastest. If toy cars always move in 3 days, prioritize those over slower items.
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