Goodwill Bins Grand Island, Nebraska Goodwill Outlet

Goodwill Bins Grand Island, Nebraska Goodwill Outlet
place

1729 S Lincoln Ave, Grand Island, NE 68801

phone

(308) 384-7896

schedule
Mon: Closed
Tue: 9 AM–12:30 PM, 1–4 PM
Wed: Closed
Thu: Closed
Fri: Closed
Sat: Closed
Sun: Closed

Goodwill Outlet in Grand Island, Nebraska, a clearance-style Goodwill bins warehouse. Inside, the hunt is on for clothing, books, shoes, electronics and more; this outlet has a pay-by-pound model, shopping carts are provided and Smoking, food, and drinks are not allowed. The pay-by-pound model helps shoppers save big on essentials.

Rules and Amenities

shopping_cart Has Carts
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

menu_book Books

Hard cover $0.59 each Paperback $0.35 each

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

Grand Island hosts one of Nebraska's only two Goodwill outlet centers (the other's in Omaha), making it a go-to thrifting spot for folks in the state's heart. The atmosphere feels true to Nebraska's roots: friendly, unhurried, and welcoming to everyone.
It's a smaller outlet where average days might show familiar local regular faces treating morning bin visits like social events – chatting about recent finds or weather while waiting for next rotations. People get excited when new bins roll out (especially weekends when regional resellers might drop in), but even "competitive" moments in Grand Island stay pretty polite and easy-going.
First-time visitors will find Grand Island's outlet makes great training ground. Still, you'll want usual gear: gloves for handling item mixes comfortably, and maybe your own tote or box since carts can be limited. The selection offers interesting grab-bags reflecting central Nebraska life – one bin might have farm clothes and tools, the next could reveal gently-used kids' toys or vintage Husker memorabilia from someone's attic cleaning.
Prices stay by the pound, so heavy winter coats won't set you back much. Locals say the best strategy is simply taking time and being thorough – because it's not as picked-over as big city outlets, great items can be buried just beneath surfaces. Timing visits around new bin rotations (staff often have schedules for rolling them out) can increase chances of snagging something special.
In Grand Island, thrifting at the Goodwill outlet feels almost like community treasure hunts – everyone's happy when someone pulls up cool finds. It's a reminder that even in quieter towns, the thrill of the hunt stays alive and well.