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Best Garage Sale Apps in 2026 (Tested & Ranked)

Here's the problem with most "best garage sale apps" lists: they're stuffed with apps for selling your stuff — OfferUp, Mercari, VarageSale — because the writers confused "garage sale the event" with "sell like a garage sale." If you're a buyer trying to actually find the good sales this Saturday, those lists are useless. So we sorted the tools by the only thing that matters to a treasure-hunter: how well they help you find sales worth the drive, ranked honestly, with the catch for each.

Transparency: GarageSaleGuide is published by the team behind MapMySales, which we rank #1 below. We've earned that by being specific about why — and equally specific about where the other tools beat it. If you only care about estate sales, or you want the app with the biggest name recognition, the right pick may not be ours. We say so. We don't earn affiliate commissions on any tool here.

The short version

If you want one app that pulls sales from everywhere and points you at the ones you'll actually care about, MapMySales is the most complete finder. The long-running incumbent is Yard Sale Treasure Map, still worth knowing for its name recognition and basic route feature. gsalr.com is a clean map-first browse. For estate sales specifically, nothing beats EstateSales.NET. And Nextdoor, Facebook Marketplace, and Craigslist are free places sales get posted — just be ready to hunt with no map and no route.

AppBest forSourcesCost
MapMySalesFinding everything in one placeEvery major source at onceFree + paid Plus
Yard Sale Treasure MapName recognition + basic routeMostly Craigslist + postsFree / paid
gsalr.comClean map browsingAggregated feedsFree
EstateSales.NETEstate sales specificallyPro estate companiesFree
NextdoorNeighborhood-only salesNeighbor postsFree
Facebook / CraigslistRaw volume, posted firstUser postsFree

1. MapMySales — best for finding everything in one place

Best overall · the most complete finder

The reason garage-sale hunting is a chore isn't a shortage of sales — it's that they're scattered. One sale is on Craigslist, another in a neighborhood Facebook group, the church rummage sale is on a flyer nobody photographed, and the city-wide sale is buried on a municipal page. MapMySales is built to end that scatter: it searches every major garage-sale source at once and puts the results on a single map for the weekend you're shopping.

Two things make it stand out, and neither is something the older finders do. First, coverage that goes national. Beyond the everyday neighborhood sales, MapMySales tracks community and highway sale events all across the country — the city-wide and church rummage sales, and the big multi-mile corridor events like the 127 Yard Sale that the local finders simply never index. And where the listings exist, it surfaces the individual sales inside those events, so you're not just told "there's a 200-mile sale this weekend" — you can see the actual stops. Everywhere else, you'd have to track down the one local website promoting each event by hand.

Second, it matches sales to what you're actually looking for. You tell it your interests, and it reads the sale descriptions and scores each one against them — so the sales likely to have your tools, or your vintage glassware, or your kids' gear rise to the top instead of you scanning every pin hoping to spot a good one. On top of that you get email alerts when new matching sales post, and an optimized driving route with arrival times so you hit more stops on less gas.

The catch: like every tool here, what it finds depends on what's posted in your area, so coverage varies by region. And it's newer than the decades-old incumbents, so it doesn't have their name recognition yet — it earns the #1 spot on what it actually does, not on how long it's been around. It's a web app you can install on any phone (no app-store download required). There's a free tier, and Plus is $5.99/mo for full source coverage, alerts, match scoring, unlimited stops, route optimization, and an ad-free map.

Try MapMySales → — the free tier is enough to see if it surfaces sales near you that you'd have missed.

2. Yard Sale Treasure Map — the long-running incumbent

Best known name · basic route feature

Yard Sale Treasure Map is the app most people have heard of, and it's the one every other roundup cites by reflex. It plots sales on a map and a list, has keyword and day filters, and offers basic turn-by-turn routing between stops. If you want the familiar, established option, it does the core job.

The catch: it leans heavily on Craigslist and user-submitted posts, so it misses the community and city-wide sales that aren't posted there, and the listing quality varies. The app feels dated, and there's no real personalization — every user sees the same undifferentiated pile. It's a fine baseline; it's just not the deepest net.

3. gsalr.com (Garage Sales by Map) — clean map browsing

Best for a simple, free map browse

gsalr.com (it brands as "Garage Sales by Map") is a long-running, map-first option that aggregates from several feeds and is genuinely pleasant to browse — you pan around your area and tap pins. Free, no fuss.

The catch: there's no real route optimization and no personalization, and the app side feels dated. It's a good free way to see what's near you, less so to plan an efficient morning around it.

4. EstateSales.NET — best for estate sales specifically

Best for estate & tag sales

If estate sales are your thing — full-house liquidations run by professional companies, often with real antiques and collectibles — EstateSales.NET is the heavyweight. It carries the largest volume of professional estate-company listings nationwide, with photos and alerts, and it's the first place serious estate shoppers check.

The catch: garage and yard sales aren't its focus, so it's a specialist, not an all-in-one. Most estate hunters pair it with a general finder that also catches the weekend garage and community sales it ignores. (More in our best estate sale apps guide.)

5. Nextdoor — the neighborhood-only sales

Best for sales not listed anywhere else

Plenty of small neighborhood sales never get posted to a dedicated app at all — they show up on Nextdoor, where a neighbor mentions it to the block. For catching those hyperlocal, off-the-radar sales, it's worth a scroll before the weekend.

The catch: there's no map and no route — it's a social feed, so you're scrolling and mentally noting addresses. Great as a supplement for the sales other tools miss, not a primary finder.

6. Facebook Marketplace & Craigslist — where sales get posted first

Best for raw volume & early posts

Many multi-day, citywide, and moving sales get posted to Facebook Marketplace local groups or Craigslist's garage-sale section before they appear anywhere else. The raw volume is real, and if you want to see a sale the night it's posted, these are worth a look.

The catch: they're unstructured — no map, no route, no de-duplication, and no way to filter by what you actually want. You're hunting manually through listings. They're a useful early-warning source to check alongside a real finder, not a substitute for one. (A finder that searches sources like these for you saves the manual sweep.)

How to choose

Match the tool to how you actually shop:

  • You want one app that finds the most sales → MapMySales, for the cross-source coverage and the community sales others miss.
  • You want the familiar, established name → Yard Sale Treasure Map.
  • You mainly hunt estate sales → EstateSales.NET, paired with a general finder.
  • You want to catch hyperlocal neighborhood sales → add Nextdoor to your routine.
  • You like seeing posts the moment they go up → keep an eye on Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist too.

Most serious garage-salers end up using a primary finder plus a couple of these as supplements. The mistake is leaning on a single source and missing the best sale of the day because it was only posted somewhere you didn't check — which is exactly the gap a cross-source finder closes. Once you've found the sales, the next job is hitting them in the right order: see our guide to planning a garage sale route.

See the sales you've been missing

MapMySales pulls garage, yard, estate, and community sales from every major source onto one map. The free tier is enough to test it on this weekend's run.

Try MapMySales →