If you’ve watched a reseller unbox a pallet and wondered whether you could do the same, this guide is where to start. Learning how to buy liquidation pallets is less about luck and more about understanding where the goods come from, how they’re priced, and what you’re actually agreeing to when you click buy.
Retailers generate enormous volumes of merchandise they can’t sell through their normal channels: customer returns, overstock that never moved, shelf-pulls rotated out for new inventory, and shipping-damaged goods. Rather than restock or landfill it, they sell it in bulk to liquidators. That merchandise gets sorted, palletized, and sold on by the pallet or the truckload. When you buy a pallet, you’re buying one step down that chain.
Never buy on the estimated retail value alone. Retail is the sticker price, not what you’ll net. A realistic rule of thumb for resellers is that you’ll recover somewhere between 30% and 80% of estimated retail depending on category, condition, and how you sell — after your time, fees, and the duds. Work backward: take the pallet price, add your freight (free here, but factor it elsewhere), divide by a conservative recovery estimate, and decide whether the margin is worth your effort.
Don’t open with a truckload. Start with a single pallet or even a mystery box to learn the workflow: receiving freight, sorting, testing, listing, and shipping. The lessons from your first lot are worth more than the profit.
Freight arrives curbside. Before you sign the Bill of Lading, count the pallets and check for visible damage — and note anything wrong on the BOL before the driver leaves. See our Shipping guide for exactly how delivery and inspection work, and our Returns policy for what’s covered if a load arrives wrong.