Swap meets and flea markets are still one of the best-kept secrets in reselling. While everyone fights over the same thrift store shelves and online "deals," the seller across the table will often hand you a profit margin you can't find anywhere else — if you know how to source. This playbook covers the four things that actually move the needle: negotiation, cash, what sells, and the vendor relationships that turn a one-time score into a steady supply.
Why Swap Meets Still Win
Prices at a swap meet are soft. Nobody wants to pack up unsold goods at the end of the day, sellers often don't know exact resale values, and cash talks loudly. That combination creates margin.
The trade-off is time and hustle. You're walking dusty aisles at 6 a.m., hauling bins, and competing with other flippers. The upside is that the inventory is uncurated — which means underpriced items hide in plain sight.

How to Negotiate Without Being "That Guy"
Good negotiation is calm, fast, and respectful. You're building a reputation in a small community, so don't burn it for a few dollars.
The core moves
- Ask the open question first. "What's your best on this?" gets you a lower starting number than naming your own price.
- Bundle to win. "I'll take these three — what can you do for all of them?" Sellers drop prices fast to clear volume.
- Use the silent pause. Name your number, then stop talking. Silence does the work.
- Carry it, don't circle it. Holding an item signals intent and gives you leverage. Setting it down signals you'll walk.
- End-of-day timing. The last hour is prime. Sellers would rather take your cash than reload the truck.
What not to do
- Don't insult the merchandise to drive the price down — it just makes the seller dig in.
- Don't lowball aggressively on your first pass with a vendor you want to see again.
- Don't haggle over a dollar when the resale spread is fifty. Pay it and move on.
Cash Is Your Superpower
Bring cash, and bring it organized.
- Small bills win deals. Paying exact change with a $20 reads very differently than peeling it off a hundred. Keep fives, tens, and singles handy.
- Set a daily spend cap before you arrive so you don't get "deal drunk" and overbuy.
- Track every buy in your phone — item, price paid, expected resale. This is how you learn your true margins over time.
- Keep your roll out of sight. Flash nothing. Pull what you need from a pocket, not a fat stack.
A quick mental formula before you buy: expected resale minus fees, shipping, and your time, divided by your cost. If you can't roughly double your money, keep walking.

What Actually Sells
Not everything cheap is worth buying. Chase categories with strong, predictable resale demand and easy authentication.
- Vintage toys and action figures — Star Wars, Transformers, Hot Wheels redlines, anything loose-but-complete. A perennial winner.
- Video games and consoles — cartridges, boxed games, controllers, and untested "lots" you can sort later.
- LEGO — bulk by the pound, complete sets, and minifigures all move.
- Designer and branded clothing — verify authenticity, but the margins on real pieces are excellent.
- Tools — vintage hand tools and quality power tools sell fast and ship simply.
- Trading cards and collectibles — Pokémon, sports, and TCGs, especially in unsorted boxes.
- Small electronics and parts — as long as you can test or sell as-is honestly.
Avoid the traps: fragile glassware that ships poorly, heavy low-value furniture, and anything you can't quickly identify or authenticate.
Building Vendor Relationships
The real money isn't in one great Saturday — it's in becoming the buyer a vendor calls first.
- Be a repeat, reliable face. Show up, pay fairly, be easy to deal with. Vendors remember.
- Tell them what you collect. "I'm always buying vintage toys and games — set them aside for me." Many will.
- Pay promptly and don't nickel-and-dime your regulars. A reputation for fair dealing brings inventory to you.
- Swap contact info. A vendor texting you a photo before the gates open is worth a hundred cold walks.
- Refer business. Send buyers their way for things you don't flip. Goodwill compounds.
Over a season, these relationships become your private pipeline — first dibs on the good stuff before the crowd ever sees it.

When You'd Rather Skip the Hassle
Here's the honest part. Sourcing is fun. Selling what you sourced is often not. Listing, photography, answering the same five buyer questions, no-shows, flakes, lowballers, shipping, returns, and the occasional chargeback can eat your weekend and your margin.
That's exactly the gap Kali.J Design, DBA The Toy Showroom in Upland, CA (Inland Empire) fills. We help people turn stuff into money two ways:
- Outright cash buyout — an instant cash offer, paid the same day. Great when you've sourced a haul and want to recycle your capital immediately instead of waiting weeks for items to sell.
- Consignment — we sell it for you and you keep 60% of the net, across eBay, Amazon, Walmart, Poshmark, Depop, Mercari, Whatnot live sales, weekly online auctions, and our Upland Toy Showroom.
We handle the listing, the photos, the buyer questions, the shipping, and the returns. You handle the fun part — finding the deals.
FAQ
How much should I expect to pay versus resale at a swap meet?
A common reseller target is buying at roughly 25–40% of expected resale, so the spread covers fees, shipping, your time, and still leaves real profit. If you can't comfortably double your money after costs, it's usually a pass.
Is haggling expected, or is it rude?
It's expected at swap meets and flea markets — most sellers price with negotiation room built in. Just keep it friendly and fast. Respectful haggling is normal; insulting the goods is not.
What if I sourced a big haul and don't want to list it all myself?
Bring it to us. You can take a same-day cash buyout to free up your capital fast, or consign it and keep 60% of the net while we do all the selling work. Many resellers mix both depending on the item.
Do I have to drive everything to Upland to get an offer?
No. You can just text or upload a photo of your items to get the conversation started. If it's a fit, we'll quote you before you ever load the car.
Sourcing should be the part you enjoy — not the listing, shipping, and dealing-with-buyers part. When your bins are full, bring your items to The Toy Showroom in Upland, or simply text or upload a photo. Get cash today, or consign for top dollar and let us handle the rest.
