Goodwill Bins Asheville, North Carolina Goodwill Outlet

Goodwill Bins Asheville, North Carolina Goodwill Outlet
place

1616 Patton Ave, Asheville, NC 28806

phone

(828) 771-2179

schedule
Mon: 10 AM–8 PM
Tue: 10 AM–8 PM
Wed: 10 AM–8 PM
Thu: 10 AM–8 PM
Fri: 10 AM–8 PM
Sat: 10 AM–8 PM
Sun: 10 AM–8 PM

Goodwill Outlet in Asheville, North Carolina, a last-chance Goodwill bins center. You can browse the Goodwill bins hunting for clothing, books, shoes, electronics and more; This outlet uses a pay-by-the-pound system and provides shopping carts. Smoking, food, and drinks are not allowed.. Serving the community since 1926, this nonprofit is ranked nationally as one of the most efficient charities.

Rules and Amenities

shopping_cart Has Carts
wc Has Restrooms
child_friendly Children Allowed
no_food Food & Drink Not Allowed
accessible Wheelchair Accessible
credit_card Accepts Cash and Card
scale Pay-Per Pound
smoke_free Smoking Allowed
leaderboard Competition Level: Very Competitive

Pricing

checkroom Clothing

$1.49 per pound

menu_book Books

$0.89 per pound

Shoes Shoes

$1.49 per pound

electrical_services Electronics

$0.49 per pound

Purses Purses

$1.49 per pound

Belts Belts

$1.49 per pound

Accessories Accessories

$1.49 per pound

Housewares Housewares

$1.49 per pound

toys Toys

$1.49 per pound

We recommend calling ahead or checking the store's website to confirm hours and availability before visiting.

Asheville's Goodwill outlet on Patton Avenue perfectly captures this mountain town's unique personality - part laid-back hippie paradise, part serious reseller hustle. The second you walk in, you can feel the energy. It's this weird mix of folks who look like they just rolled out of a hammock and others who are clearly here on business, scanning for their next profitable flip.
The bins rotate every thirty minutes like clockwork, which keeps things fresh and prevents that stagnant feeling you get at some outlets. What comes out of those bins is pure Asheville - vintage hiking boots that have seen some serious trail time, perfectly broken-in denim that screams authentic mountain life, hand-carved wooden bears (because of course), and pottery pieces that somebody definitely made in their garage studio.
They're pretty strict about the rules here - you absolutely need gloves to dig, and they don't mess around with the no-kids-under-16 policy in the digging area. Makes sense when you think about it, but still catches some people off guard.
Here's what nobody tells you: dress in layers and bring water. That warehouse gets hot as blazes, especially during summer. I've seen people bail after one rotation because they couldn't handle the heat. The real insider move? Show up on weekday evenings when the tourist crowds have cleared out. That's when the good stuff from Biltmore estate sales starts hitting the floor, and you're not fighting twenty other people for the same vintage flannel.