Goodwill Outlet in Birmingham, Alabama, a treasure-hunt Goodwill bins outlet. 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.; restrooms on-site. Bulk buying with deep discounts makes every trip here a bargain hunter’s dream.
Rules and Amenities
shopping_cart Has Carts
wc Has Restrooms
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: Competitive
Pricing
checkroom
Clothing
$1.99 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.59 per pound (+25 lbs)
menu_book
Books
Hard cover $1.39 each
Paperback $0.79 each
Shoes
$1.99 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.59 per pound (+25 lbs)
electrical_services
Electronics
$0.69 per pound
Accessories
$1.99 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.59 per pound (+25 lbs)
Housewares
$1.99 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.59 per pound (+25 lbs)
Birmingham's Goodwill outlet is a thrifter's paradise - spacious, bright, and most importantly, blessed with serious air conditioning that saves your life during Alabama's brutal summers. Located on Green Springs Highway, it's become this bustling hub where you can really see the cross-section of Southern culture in what people donate.
You've got SEC tailgate gear everywhere, University of Alabama crimson as far as the eye can see, plus genuine mid-century furniture pieces that came from those beautiful historic homes around town. The whole vibe is organized and polite - very Alabama nice - with staff announcing rotations over the PA system every half hour.
Gloves are definitely recommended because you never know what's lurking in those bins - broken glass, rusty tools, random sharp objects that somehow made it through sorting. Shopping carts are everywhere, but here's the thing: the aisles get pretty narrow and crowded, especially on weekends when everyone's out hunting.
Smart strategy is to park your cart along the wall, claim your territory, then carry a reusable bag while you dig. Keep going back to dump your finds so you're not lugging everything around the whole time.
Saturdays get crazy with antique dealers and collectors specifically hunting for rare books and civil rights era papers. But here's a secret - spend time in the children's book bins that most serious collectors ignore. I've seen people pull first editions from those overlooked sections because dealers assume there's nothing valuable mixed in with the picture books.