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Anyone have any luck here with garage / yard sale?

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Moving to Khon kaen and have some excess stuff I wouldn't mind getting rid of. Back home I'd have a yard sale but never seen one here?

That is an interesting question. I will be looking forward to hearing how yours turns out, if you decide to go forward with it.

I've never seen a garage sale in Thailand either. Guess it's considered too LoSo even for LoSo's.

Maybe better seeing if there is a localized FB/forum that sells second hand stuff IMO.

Never seen a yard sale.

I have always found that leaving outside your gate all the stuff you don't need/don't want to take with you is the best way. Over time you'll find that people passing by will come and take whatever they need and if you live in a poor village or if there are poor people living around you, it'll all go pretty quickly. I like to think that this is a face saving way of letting those in need get what they need. Better than expecting them to come to you and pay for it.

Of course if you have something really valuable, use classified ads.

Second hand items for some reason are hard to sell here at reasonable or less than reasonable prices. Everybody that calls wants you to cut the price in half. Also after buying many products new here I find your lucky to get 2 or 3 years out of them before they are kaput. I find the quality of items here very poor. I just threw out my less than 2 year old recliner chair that simply collapsed and started to shed its skin. Small appliances ditto. When I buy new I try to get a 2 to 3 year warranty because that is about the life span of products here. Korean made TV's a little different story but a good used one which I tried to sell last month found no takers so I kept it and did not buy a new one. Frigs etc. fair quality and also computers. I just bought a new USB multi port for my sticks a 6 stick port and the store gave me a 1 week warranty. Things are not made to last we used to keep TV's years ago for 10 to 15 years not so today. I often wonder what happened to my recliner?

Second hand items for some reason are hard to sell here at reasonable or less than reasonable prices. Everybody that calls wants you to cut the price in half. Also after buying many products new here I find your lucky to get 2 or 3 years out of them before they are kaput. I find the quality of items here very poor. I just threw out my less than 2 year old recliner chair that simply collapsed and started to shed its skin. Small appliances ditto. When I buy new I try to get a 2 to 3 year warranty because that is about the life span of products here. Korean made TV's a little different story but a good used one which I tried to sell last month found no takers so I kept it and did not buy a new one. Frigs etc. fair quality and also computers. I just bought a new USB multi port for my sticks a 6 stick port and the store gave me a 1 week warranty. Things are not made to last we used to keep TV's years ago for 10 to 15 years not so today. I often wonder what happened to my recliner?

I know too late but there is a good chair restoring shop in Khon Kaen. I have a leather one that was recovered 8 years ago and actualy needing done again. Last time only cost 2000 baht.

An American friend of mine took his Thai wife to the States for a vacation, the thing she liked best were the yard sales. She was upper middle class Thai so maybe a yard sale would work.

You might want to peddle your clobber at one of the regular one-day markets - "talaad nat" - but you'll need a Thai to do your bidding for you, and don't expect to come home with much money from it. But it can be fun and an OK way to dispose of unwanted household items.

If you're stuff is more valuable or specialised you might want to hawk it around the local shops and traders, or even your friends and neighbours, or anywhere you think someone might want it.

If it's just a case of getting rid of stuff then giving it to people that you like is the most rewarding thing to do - or bin it.

Second hand items for some reason are hard to sell here at reasonable or less than reasonable prices. Everybody that calls wants you to cut the price in half. Also after buying many products new here I find your lucky to get 2 or 3 years out of them before they are kaput. I find the quality of items here very poor. I just threw out my less than 2 year old recliner chair that simply collapsed and started to shed its skin. Small appliances ditto. When I buy new I try to get a 2 to 3 year warranty because that is about the life span of products here. Korean made TV's a little different story but a good used one which I tried to sell last month found no takers so I kept it and did not buy a new one. Frigs etc. fair quality and also computers. I just bought a new USB multi port for my sticks a 6 stick port and the store gave me a 1 week warranty. Things are not made to last we used to keep TV's years ago for 10 to 15 years not so today. I often wonder what happened to my recliner?

I had the same problem with my recliner after 2 years it just self destructed

You might want to peddle your clobber at one of the regular one-day markets - "talaad nat" - but you'll need a Thai to do your bidding for you, and don't expect to come home with much money from it. But it can be fun and an OK way to dispose of unwanted household items.

is there any list of where these are around BKK ?

since all the street markets are being closed all around town this may have to be my "fix" for being a junkman

Facebook groups works pretty well here if you want to get rid of stuff. Just take some pictures and post it online , don't expect to get good prices for it.

Maybe better seeing if there is a localized FB/forum that sells second hand stuff IMO.

Yea .... come to think of it the BIB will certainly have their hands out etc.

I loved going to "flea markets" garage/yard sales in US. It was like "treasure hunting." :-) Wish they were here buttttttttttttttt

Nah, add my ditto to 'never seen a yard sale' here. I'm with KhunOr that the recommended way to get rid of stuff is just to leave it outside next to your garbage cans....seems to miraculously vanish overnight....the Thai Power of Free!

Facebook groups works pretty well here if you want to get rid of stuff. Just take some pictures and post it online , don't expect to get good prices for it.

Could consider using BahtSold or Craigslist. Truck2hand is interesting but only in Thai language.

Maybe better seeing if there is a localized FB/forum that sells second hand stuff IMO.

Yea .... come to think of it the BIB will certainly have their hands out etc.

I loved going to "flea markets" garage/yard sales in US. It was like "treasure hunting." :-) Wish they were here buttttttttttttttt

Did you think I said FBI ?
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I have stuff like security screens, submersible pump, bits and pieces like that. Don't want to just leave them outside. Might try put a sign on the roadside one day and maybe snag some farang going past.

Secondhand / retro is starting to make a hold here, mainly in Bangkok but more and more at regional markets seeing secondhand...mostly clothes. Ive been buying retro Hawiian shirts, Columbia sports shirts, shorts, army stuff....usually for around 50c a piece. Missus is horrified when I browse. It's just not Thai to buy secondhand, even the poorest people wont go near it.....they don't want to look poor hahaha. I think it also has something to do with Pee (ghosts) inhabiting the clothes or something too.

Second hand cars and bikes apparently are extremely bad luck.

If you live in Bangkok there is a good second hand market on the top floor of Panthip Plaza 2 on Ngam Wongwahn road. Only on the weekends though. Mid week the space is a car park. Not air conditioned but totally under cover. You have to pay for your pitch though , about 100 baht. Best to get there early as the car park fills up real quick.

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