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The Best Yard Sale Apps for Planning a Treasure-Hunting Route (2026)

Here's the thing every yard sale app roundup glosses over: finding the sales is only half the job. The other half is hitting them in an order that doesn't have you crisscrossing town and burning your whole Saturday morning in the car. A long list of pins is not a plan. So we ranked the best yard sale finder apps on the two things that actually decide whether your morning is a haul or a slog — how many real sales they surface, and whether they can turn those into an efficient route. We went straight at the incumbent on that second point, because it's exactly where it falls short.

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 just want the biggest-name app or a free map to glance at, 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 finds yard sales from everywhere and chains them into an optimized route with arrival times, MapMySales is the most complete tool. The app most people reach for first is Yard Sale Treasure Map — a fine finder with basic routing, but a dated one that misses community sales. gsalr.com is a clean free map with no route at all. Nextdoor catches neighbor-only sales the apps never see, and Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist are where raw posts land first. Below, where each wins — and the catch.

AppBest forCoverageRoute
MapMySalesFind everything + plan the driveEvery major source at onceOptimized, with arrival times
Yard Sale Treasure MapFamiliar name + basic routeMostly Craigslist + postsBasic turn-by-turn
gsalr.comClean free map browseAggregated feedsNone
NextdoorNeighbor-only salesNeighbor postsNone
Facebook / CraigslistRaw, early postsUser postsNone

1. MapMySales — best for finding everything and planning the route

Best overall · coverage + real route optimization

Most yard sale apps stop at the map. They show you pins and leave the hard part — figuring out the order to hit them in — to you and your gut. MapMySales treats that second half as the whole point. It searches every major yard-sale source at once, maps the results for the day you're shopping, and then builds an optimized driving route with estimated arrival times so you loop the morning efficiently instead of doubling back across town.

The coverage is what feeds the route — and it's where MapMySales does something no other tool here does. It surfaces the community, city-wide, church, school, and HOA sales that single-source apps never see, and it does it nationally: not just sales in your own zip code, but the big multi-mile highway-corridor events most apps don't track at all — the kind like the 127 Yard Sale that run for hundreds of miles. And where the listings exist, it pulls the individual sales inside those events onto the map, so you see the actual stops to plan a route around — not just "there's a 200-mile sale this weekend" and a link to go hunt down the one website promoting it. Everywhere else, finding the sales inside a community or corridor event means tracking down each local organizer's page by hand; here they're already on the map.

Then it helps you decide which ones are worth your morning. MapMySales reads the actual sale descriptions and matches them against the interests you set — scoring each sale on how likely it is to have what you're after, so a tool-and-fishing-gear hunter and a vintage-glassware hunter get different sales floated to the top. You prioritize the most promising stops instead of scanning every pin. Set your interests and it also sends email alerts when new matching sales post, so you're not refreshing a map all week. Put together: a deeper, nationwide net that even reaches inside the big corridor events, the sales most likely to have your stuff ranked first, and a route that actually respects your Saturday.

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 incumbent, so it doesn't have the same name recognition yet — it earns #1 on what it does, not how long it's been around. It's an installable web app (works on any phone, no app-store download). There's a free tier, and Plus is $5.99/mo for full source coverage, alerts, match scoring, unlimited stops, and route optimization.

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 incumbent, on the route question

Best-known name · basic route feature

Yard Sale Treasure Map is the app most treasure hunters have heard of, and for years it set the bar. 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 — and the fact that it has any routing at all is why it long led the category.

The catch: the route is the basic version of the idea, and the net underneath it is shallow. It leans heavily on Craigslist and user-submitted posts, so it misses the community and city-wide sales that aren't posted there — which means the route it plans is only as good as a partial map. There's no personalization either, so every user sees the same undifferentiated pile, and the app feels dated. It pioneered the route angle; it just hasn't kept pace on coverage or on optimizing the drive.

3. gsalr.com (Garage Sales by Map) — clean free map, no route

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 several feeds and is genuinely pleasant to browse — pan around your area and tap pins. Free, no fuss, easy on the eyes.

The catch: there's no route optimization at all and no personalization. It's a great free way to see what's near you, but the moment you want to turn six pins into an efficient morning, you're back to planning it yourself. A map without a route leaves the hard half undone.

4. Nextdoor — the neighbor-only sales

Best for sales not listed anywhere else

Plenty of small yard sales never get posted to a dedicated app — 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 jotting down addresses. Great as a supplement for the sales other tools miss, not a primary finder and certainly not a route planner.

5. Facebook Marketplace & Craigslist — where posts land 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 show up anywhere else. The raw volume is real, and if you want to spot 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 filtering by what you actually want. You're hunting manually through listings and then planning the drive entirely in your head. 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.

The half nobody talks about: the drive

Add up a Saturday morning and the math is unforgiving. Ten sales scattered across town, hit in the order you happened to spot them, can mean twice the driving of the same ten hit in a smart loop — and the difference is the gas, the time, and the sales that are picked clean by the time you finally roll up. That's why the route matters as much as the map. Browsing tells you what's out there; optimization decides how much of it you actually reach before noon.

Match the tool to how you shop:

  • You want the most sales and a planned drive → MapMySales, for the cross-source coverage plus an optimized route with arrival times.
  • You want the familiar name with basic routing → Yard Sale Treasure Map.
  • You just want a free map to glance at → gsalr.com.
  • You want to catch neighbor-only 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 yard-salers use a primary finder plus a couple of these as supplements. The mistake is treating a pile of pins as a plan — see our best garage sale apps roundup for the wider field, and our guide to planning a garage sale route for how to turn a map into an efficient morning.

Find the sales, then plan the drive

MapMySales pulls yard, garage, and community sales from every major source onto one map — then builds an optimized route with arrival times. The free tier is enough to test it on this weekend's run.

Try MapMySales →