Estate Sale Strategy

How to Find Good Estate Sales (and Skip the Bad Ones)

By Finest Flips · The team behind 2,500 active eBay listings · Updated June 2026

Here's the truth nobody tells beginners: most estate sales are not worth your time. The difference between resellers who pull four-figure items out of estate sales every month and the ones who burn every Saturday for nothing isn't luck — it's that the pros decide which sales deserve them before they ever get in the car.

We've sourced hundreds of estate sales. A $25 buy from one of them sold for $1,225. A $150 flag from another sold for $1,799 within two days of listing. Every one of those sales was picked in advance, from a couch. Here's how to read a sale like a professional.

Where to find estate sales

One site matters: EstateSales.net. It's where estate sale companies in nearly every U.S. market post their sales, dates, terms, and — most importantly — photos. Set your zip code, set alerts, and check it weekly. Sales in most areas start opening on Wednesday and run through the weekend, so scout early in the week.

Craigslist, Facebook events, and local papers catch a few extras, but if you only use one source, use EstateSales.net. The photos are the entire game, which brings us to the real skill.

The photos tell you everything — if you read all of them

Most buyers flip through a sale's photos like it's Instagram. Train yourself to do the opposite: open every single photo and study it like an appraiser. The money is rarely the featured shot. It's the camera on the shelf behind the featured furniture, the tin sign leaning against the garage wall, the unopened boxes under the table.

While you study, ask one question about the sale as a whole: is this sale staged or dirty?

Staged sales: pretty, priced, and picked over

Beautifully arranged tables. Everything dusted, displayed, individually tagged. It looks wonderful — and it's usually a waste of your morning. A staged sale means the estate company had the time and intent to research everything in the house. Their prices are at or near retail. The margin you need was extracted before the doors opened.

Dirty sales: where the money hides

Cluttered rooms. Stacked, unopened boxes. A garage that looks like the family just walked away. This is what you want. Unsorted means un-researched, and un-researched means underpriced. When a company is selling volume instead of curating a boutique, the home-run items are sitting in boxes nobody opened — priced like junk because nobody looked.

Rule of thumb: when two sales open the same morning, go to whichever one looks the most disorganized and overloaded. Mess equals margin.

Red flags that say "skip it"

Green flags that say "set an alarm"

Timing: when you show up decides what you take home

Estate sales run on entry lists, and the first buyers through the door get first pick of everything. Serious resellers arrive long before the doors open and put their names high on that list. If you stroll in mid-morning, you're shopping what the first group rejected. And don't ignore the discount days — most sales cut prices 25–75% on their final days, which is when patient buyers take the big-ticket items everyone else was too scared to buy at full price. That $1,799 flag? Priced at $500 on day one. We took it on day three for $150.

The next level: knowing what items are worth before you go

Everything above filters which sales deserve you. The pros go one step further: they identify specific valuable items in the listing photos and confirm what they're worth before leaving the house — using nothing but a phone and a couple of free AI tools. That method (we call it the AI Pre-Scout) is the heart of our estate sale system, and it's how six of our last ten documented flips were found before we ever set foot in the sale.

Want the full estate sale playbook?

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