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Goodwill Closest to Me β€” Find It, Donate Smarter, Shop Better

Budget Seniors, June 24, 2026
β™»οΈπŸ›οΈ
Goodwill Β· Thrift Stores Β· Donation Centers Β· Outlets & Bins

With over 3,400 Goodwill locations across the U.S. and 100 new stores opening, there’s a good chance one is closer than you think. This guide covers how to find your nearest store, donation hours, the by-the-pound outlet experience, and the insider tips most shoppers never discover.

πŸ“°
What’s Happening With Goodwill Right Now

Goodwill is in the middle of its biggest expansion in decades β€” after posting a record $7 billion in revenue in 2025, the organization is opening roughly 100 new stores this year, with a focus on larger-format locations. The boom is being driven by inflation-conscious shoppers, younger buyers who see thrifting as their default choice, and a surge in donations. If you haven’t found a Goodwill near you recently, it’s worth checking again β€” the closest location may have changed. Goodwill estimates it is now within 10 miles of roughly 85% of the U.S. population.

πŸ“ Find a Goodwill Location Near You

The map buttons below use your location to pull up the nearest Goodwill thrift stores, donation drop-off centers, Goodwill Outlet stores (the bins), and Salvation Army locations for comparison. Tap any button and the map updates to your area automatically.

Finding Goodwill near you…
πŸ“‹ Key Facts β€” Goodwill Shopping, Donating & Finding Locations

The questions below are the ones people actually have but most sites skip right over. Here are direct, honest answers β€” no filler.

  • 1
    How many Goodwill locations are there in the U.S.? About 3,400 stores in the U.S. and Canada Β· 100 new locations opening this year Β· Within 10 miles of ~85% of the U.S. population Β· Official locator: goodwill.org/locator
    Goodwill is a federation of more than 150 independent regional organizations, not a single company with one national headquarters. Each regional Goodwill runs its own stores, sets its own prices, and makes its own policies β€” which is why hours, accepted donations, and discount days vary from one city to the next. The national count sits around 3,400 locations and is growing. The fastest-growing format right now is the larger Goodwill Superstore β€” warehouse-scale stores with wider aisles, more furniture, and higher daily inventory turnover than a standard neighborhood location.
  • 2
    What is the best day to shop at Goodwill? Monday and Tuesday mornings β€” weekend donations hit the floor Β· Color-tag 50% off day varies by location, usually one weekday Β· Ask an employee which day is their biggest discount day
    Most people drop off donations over the weekend when they’re doing housecleaning. Goodwill staff sort, price, and stock that incoming merchandise over the following day or two β€” making Monday and Tuesday mornings the window when the most fresh inventory appears on the floor, before other regulars have picked through it. Separately, almost every Goodwill location runs a rotating color-tag discount day where all items with that week’s featured tag color are 50% off. The tag color and day of the week varies by store and rotates weekly, so the only reliable way to know is to ask a staff member or check your local store’s Facebook page, where many post the current tag color each week.
  • 3
    Are Goodwill clothes washed before they’re put out for sale? No β€” Goodwill does not wash, dry-clean, or sanitize donated items before putting them on the rack Β· Always wash anything you buy before wearing it Β· This applies to all thrift chains, not just Goodwill
    Goodwill staff inspect items for obvious damage and sort by category, but laundering clothing is not part of the process β€” it would be cost-prohibitive given the volume. This isn’t a flaw or a secret; it’s simply how every thrift store operates. The practical takeaway: treat any thrift purchase the same way you’d treat something borrowed from a stranger β€” run it through a normal wash cycle before it goes near your skin or your furniture. For upholstered furniture or fabric items that can’t go in a washer, a fabric-safe spray disinfectant and a good steam if you have it handles most concerns.
  • 4
    What is the Goodwill Superstore and how is it different from a regular location? Larger footprint (often 20,000–40,000+ sq ft) Β· More furniture, appliances, and housewares Β· Higher daily inventory volume Β· Some include a Goodwill Outlet/bins section inside
    Goodwill Superstores are the chain’s larger-format locations, and the organization is actively expanding this format in 2026. Where a standard Goodwill might occupy a former retail strip-mall space, a Superstore typically takes over a former big-box space β€” think the size of a mid-size grocery store. The difference you’ll feel as a shopper: wider furniture sections, more electronics and appliances, more room to browse without crowding, and a faster inventory cycle because there’s simply more space to put new donations out. Some Superstores include an attached outlet/bins section, which is the highest-volume, lowest-price option in the Goodwill system.
  • 5
    What is Goodwill by the pound β€” and is it worth visiting? Goodwill Outlet stores sell items in large rolling bins at roughly $1.29–$2.19 per pound for clothing Β· Items that didn’t sell in regular stores land here Β· Extremely low prices but a competitive, fast-paced environment Β· Not for everyone, but great for budget shoppers and resellers
    Goodwill Outlet stores β€” widely known as “the bins” β€” are a completely different experience from a standard thrift store. Everything goes into large rolling blue bins, priced by weight rather than by piece. Clothing and fabric items run about $1.29 to $2.19 per pound at most locations. The bins turn over constantly β€” workers swap in fresh bins every 15 to 30 minutes throughout the day, which means the best strategy is arriving when a fresh rotation is coming out. It’s competitive and sometimes crowded, particularly at popular locations, but the prices are genuinely hard to match. Wear gloves, bring your own bags, and check the Goodwill locator specifically filtering for “Outlet” β€” there are over 100 across the country but they’re less common than regular stores.
  • 6
    What are Goodwill donation hours β€” can I drop off anytime? Donation drop-off is only accepted during store hours β€” never leave donations outside after closing Β· Most stores accept donations until 30–60 minutes before closing Β· Some locations have separate attended donation centers with their own hours
    This catches a lot of people off guard. Unlike some charity bins you’ve seen in parking lots, Goodwill requires a staff member to be present when you donate β€” they process your items immediately at the drop-off bay and can give you a receipt. Leaving bags outside when the store is closed creates problems: items get wet, damaged, or stolen, and Goodwill then has to pay to dispose of unusable donations. The practical rule is to call ahead or check the specific location’s hours on Google Maps before driving over with a trunk full of stuff. Most stores post their donation drop-off hours separately from shopping hours; the cutoff is often 30 to 60 minutes before the store closes for the day.
  • 7
    Does donating to Goodwill give you a tax deduction? Yes β€” donated items are tax-deductible if you itemize on your federal return Β· Always ask for a receipt at drop-off Β· You assign the value yourself using IRS Publication 561 Β· Non-cash donations over $500 require IRS Form 8283
    Goodwill is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit, which means donations of goods β€” clothes, furniture, electronics β€” are potentially tax-deductible for donors who itemize their deductions. The key word is “itemize”: if you take the standard deduction (which most Americans do since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act raised it), thrift donations won’t reduce your tax bill. If you do itemize, ask for a receipt at every drop-off, keep a list of what you donated and its condition, and use IRS Publication 561 to assign values. For a bag of clothing in good condition, the IRS-accepted range is typically $2–$10 per item. Donations totaling over $500 in claimed value in a year require IRS Form 8283.
  • 8
    Where is the biggest Goodwill store in the U.S.? The Austin, Texas flagship (formerly on N. Lamar Blvd.) was long cited as one of the largest Β· Several Goodwill Superstores in Texas, California, and Florida rival it Β· With 100 new large-format stores opening, the record keeps changing
    Goodwill doesn’t maintain an official ranking of its largest stores β€” partly because each location is operated by an independent regional organization, and partly because the format keeps expanding. The Austin, Texas location on North Lamar Boulevard earned a long-running reputation as one of the largest Goodwill stores in the country, drawing visitors specifically to see its scale. But with Goodwill’s 2026 expansion focused specifically on larger-format stores, several new Superstores have opened that match or exceed it. If you’re near a major metro area, search Google Maps for “Goodwill Superstore” specifically β€” these tend to be the biggest locations in any given city.
πŸ“Š Goodwill by the Numbers
πŸͺ Total U.S. Locations
~3,400 stores
Plus 100 new openings underway in 2026, focused on larger-format superstores. Within 10 miles of ~85% of Americans.
πŸ’΅ Annual Revenue
$7 billion
Record revenue in 2025 β€” up ~7% year over year. Nearly 300 million shopping transactions in stores. Sales up nearly 50% since 2019.
πŸ“¦ Annual Donations
~6 billion lbs
Goodwill collects roughly 6 billion pounds of donated goods per year, diverting a significant portion from landfills through resale, recycling, and overseas distribution.
βš–οΈ Outlet Pricing
$1.29–$2.19/lb
Goodwill Outlet “bins” pricing for clothing and soft goods. Over 100 outlet locations nationally. Items rotate every 15–30 minutes on the floor.
πŸ” Your Situation β€” What You Actually Need to Know
I want to donate β€” what does Goodwill actually accept, and what gets rejected?
DONATING Β· WHAT’S ACCEPTED
Goodwill accepts the vast majority of household goods, but a few common categories get turned away β€” and the rules vary by location. Clothing in any condition, books, working electronics, housewares, toys, sporting goods, and most furniture are typically welcome. Items Goodwill usually cannot take: mattresses and box springs (most locations, due to health regulations), large appliances like refrigerators and washers, car seats (due to liability), cribs made before safety standards changed, items with visible mold or pest infestation, and hazardous materials. The most important thing to know: rules differ between regional organizations. The Austin Goodwill may accept things the Chicago Goodwill won’t. Before loading a truck with furniture, call the specific location or check their website. Goodwill also offers free home pickup for larger estates through a partnership with ReSupply in some areas β€” call your local Goodwill to ask if this service is available near you.
βœ… Accepted: clothing, books, electronics, furniture (most), housewares ❌ Usually rejected: mattresses, car seats, cribs, large appliances 🏠 Free home pickup: ask your local Goodwill about the ReSupply service πŸ“ž Always call ahead for large or unusual item donations
I’ve never been to a Goodwill Outlet β€” what should I know before going?
OUTLET Β· BY THE POUND Β· BINS
The Goodwill Outlet is a fundamentally different experience from the retail store β€” lower prices, but higher energy and physical demands. Everything lands in large rolling blue bins that get swapped out constantly. You pay by weight, not by price tag. The atmosphere is busy and competitive, particularly right when a fresh bin rotation comes out. A few practical things to bring: your own reusable bags (required at many outlets, and giant ones help), a pair of nitrile gloves if you want to dig without worry, and a sense of adventure. Arrive when the store opens or ask the staff when the next fresh rotation is coming β€” that’s when the best finds are available, before regular resellers have gone through everything. Don’t go on a Saturday afternoon if you want space and patience; weekday mornings are calmer. Most outlets have separate sections for clothing, hardlines, shoes, books, and media. Check goodwill.org/locator and filter specifically for “Outlet” since regular stores don’t appear in that filter.
βš–οΈ Clothing: $1.29–$2.19/lb at most locations 🧀 Bring gloves and large reusable bags ⏰ Best time: when a fresh bin rotation comes out β€” ask staff πŸ“ Locator filter: goodwill.org/locator β†’ select “Outlet”
I want to find the best deals β€” what do Goodwill insiders actually do differently?
SHOPPING TIPS Β· DISCOUNTS
The difference between a casual Goodwill shopper and someone who finds genuinely valuable things comes down to a few habits. First: learn your local store’s color-tag rotation. One day a week, all items with that color tag are 50% off β€” ask a staff member which day, or watch for it posted on the store’s social media. Second: shop Monday through Wednesday mornings, when weekend donations have been processed and are hitting the floor fresh. Third: ask about discounts that aren’t advertised. Many locations offer 10–20% off for seniors, students, or military β€” these are often not posted anywhere prominent, but staff will apply them when asked. Fourth: thrift in more affluent neighborhoods. Goodwill stores in wealthier ZIP codes receive higher-quality donations β€” name brands, barely worn clothing, and newer electronics. It’s worth the drive if you’re looking for something specific. Fifth: check ShopGoodwill.com for higher-value items your local store might have listed for online auction rather than putting on the shelf.
🏷️ Color-tag day: 50% off β€” ask staff which day this week πŸ“… Shop Mon–Wed mornings: freshest weekend donations on the floor πŸ’° Ask about senior/military/student discounts β€” often unadvertised 🌐 ShopGoodwill.com: auction higher-value items from your local store
I need to clear out a household β€” what’s the most practical way to donate everything?
ESTATE CLEANOUT Β· LARGE DONATIONS
For a full household cleanout, a combination of drop-off, scheduled pickup, and realistic expectations about what Goodwill can take will save you a lot of frustration. Start with a call to the specific Goodwill location closest to you β€” not the national website β€” to get their current list of accepted items and whether they have scheduled home pickup available in your area. The ReSupply partnership (available through some regional Goodwills) will send a licensed, insured driver to your home and take everything you want to donate in a single visit, regardless of stairs or size. Items that Goodwill can’t take β€” mattresses, large appliances, hazardous materials β€” will need a separate plan: your city’s bulk trash pickup day, appliance retailers with haul-away programs, or a junk removal service. For a true estate situation with valuables mixed in, it’s worth having someone walk through beforehand β€” higher-value items (jewelry, art, collectibles) may be worth selling separately rather than donating, since Goodwill will price them at thrift-store levels.
πŸ“ž Call your local Goodwill first β€” rules vary by location 🏠 Home pickup: ask about ReSupply (available in select areas) πŸͺ‘ Furniture accepted at most stores β€” call to confirm large items πŸ’Ž Valuables: consider selling separately before donating
I’m on a tight budget β€” can I actually furnish a home or wardrobe at Goodwill?
BUDGET Β· FURNISHING Β· CLOTHING
Yes β€” and with current inflation pressures, more people are doing exactly this than at any point in the last decade. Goodwill’s $7 billion in sales last year wasn’t driven by occasional browsers picking up a single item; it reflects people genuinely replacing significant portions of their household spending with thrift purchases. For furniture, the key is patience and a clear sense of what you need β€” inventory is unpredictable, and you won’t always find exactly what you’re looking for on any given day. But visit consistently and the odds are good. For clothing, the Goodwill Outlet (bins) at $1–$2 per pound can outfit an entire wardrobe for a fraction of what fast fashion costs. For appliances, Goodwill regularly takes in toasters, coffee makers, blenders, and lamps in working condition β€” larger appliances like vacuums show up too but vary by location. Don’t overlook the glass cases near checkout at many stores, which hold electronics, jewelry, and higher-end small items that staff have pulled from general sorting.
πŸ›‹οΈ Furniture: visit consistently β€” inventory changes daily πŸ‘• Wardrobe: bins at $1–$2/lb β€” best value in the building πŸ“¦ Appliances: small ones common; large ones vary by location πŸ’Ž Check the glass case at checkout β€” higher-value items there
πŸ’‘ Things Regular Goodwill Shoppers Know That First-Timers Don’t
πŸ“§ Sign Up for Your Local Goodwill’s Emails or Texts

Goodwill’s national brand and your local organization are separate β€” and the savings are local too. Many regional Goodwills send email subscribers a 20% off coupon usable on repeat visits without expiration (minimum purchase required). They also announce tag-color discount days, special sale events, and seasonal clearance via email before anyone else hears about it. Search for your specific regional Goodwill’s website (not goodwill.org) and sign up directly β€” the national site won’t have these local coupons.

πŸ›’ Donation Day Coupons β€” Shop and Donate on the Same Trip

Many Goodwill locations will give you a coupon to use on your next shopping visit when you drop off a donation. Some give a percentage off your next purchase on the spot. This is worth combining into a single trip: bring donations, get the coupon, shop. The coupon structure varies by location β€” some require a minimum spend, some are 10% off, some are more generous. Ask at the drop-off window before you leave so you know what you have to work with.

🧹 What Goodwill Does With Items That Don’t Sell

Nothing just disappears. Items that don’t sell on the regular retail floor get moved to a clearance section, then to a Goodwill Outlet where they’re sold by the pound. Items that don’t sell at the outlet are either recycled through textile recyclers, sold in bulk to overseas buyers, or in some cases disposed of responsibly to avoid landfill. The system is designed to extract value at every stage β€” which is why even damaged clothing often has a second life as industrial rags or fiber rather than going to a dumpster.

⚠️ Don’t Leave Donations Outside After Hours

This comes up constantly and it’s worth repeating firmly: placing donations in bags outside a closed Goodwill β€” even in the drop-off bay area β€” is not helpful. Bags get wet, opened, items go missing, and Goodwill ends up paying to dispose of unsalvageable donations. If you pull up and the donation bay is closed, drive back during business hours. Many Goodwill locations post their donation drop-off hours separately from shopping hours on Google Maps β€” the drop-off window often closes 30–60 minutes before the store shuts for the night.

πŸ”‘ Quick Reference β€” Goodwill Links & Contacts
πŸ—ΊοΈ Store locator: goodwill.org/locator πŸ“¦ Donation info: goodwill.org/ways-to-give πŸ›οΈ Online store: shopgoodwill.com 🏒 Find your regional Goodwill: goodwill.org/find-a-goodwill πŸ“ž Large item / home pickup: call your local Goodwill directly βš–οΈ Outlet locator: goodwill.org/locator β†’ filter for Outlet πŸ’Ό Job training programs: goodwill.org/jobs-training πŸͺ Salvation Army comparison: satruck.org/find-a-store πŸ“‹ IRS donation values: irs.gov (Publication 561) 🌐 Goodwill on social: search your city + “Goodwill” for local page
βœ… 5 Things to Do Before Your Next Goodwill Visit
  • Step 1: Use goodwill.org/locator and search for both “Retail Store” and “Outlet” separately β€” the nearest outlet is often a different location than the retail store and can be worth the extra drive for major purchases.
  • Step 2: Find your local regional Goodwill’s website (not the national site) and sign up for their email or text list. Many send 20% off coupons and announce color-tag discount days before anyone else sees them.
  • Step 3: Ask a staff member two questions when you walk in: what is today’s color-tag discount color, and what day do they run their biggest weekly discount? These facts change weekly and aren’t posted prominently.
  • Step 4: If you’re donating, call ahead with unusual or large items to confirm they’re accepted at that specific location. Rules vary between regional organizations β€” what the Denver Goodwill takes, the Phoenix one might not.
  • Step 5: Always wash thrifted clothing before wearing it, and wipe down hard goods like dishes and frames before use. Goodwill does not sanitize donations β€” this is standard across all thrift chains.

Goodwill Industries is a federation of more than 150 independent nonprofit organizations operating under the Goodwill name. Store hours, donation policies, accepted items, discount programs, and outlet locations vary by regional organization. Always verify information with your specific local Goodwill before visiting. This page has no affiliation with Goodwill Industries International or any regional Goodwill organization.

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