Goodwill Outlet in Hillsboro, Oregon, a clearance-style Goodwill bins warehouse. Shoppers hunt for the Goodwill bins hunting for clothing, books, shoes, electronics and more; this outlet uses a pay-by-the-pound system and provides shopping carts. Regular bin rotations keep the selection changing throughout the day.
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: Very Competitive
Pricing
checkroom
Clothing
$2.19 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.29 per pound (+25 lbs)
Shoes
$2.19 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.29 per pound (+25 lbs)
electrical_services
Electronics
$0.79 per pound
Housewares
$2.19 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.29 per pound (+25 lbs)
toys
Toys
$2.19 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.29 per pound (+25 lbs)
Textiles
$2.19 per pound (0-25 lbs)
$1.29 per pound (+25 lbs)
The Hillsboro Goodwill outlet is way bigger than it looks from the outside - this sprawling warehouse that serves as ground zero for Silicon Forest thrifting. What makes it fascinating is how perfectly the inventory reflects the area's weird economy: cutting-edge tech culture smashed up against classic Pacific Northwest outdoorsy vibes.
You'll literally find official Intel branded gear sitting right next to authentic Pendleton wool blankets. It's like the tech bros and the granola crowd are having a yard sale together, and somehow it works perfectly.
Their rotation system is actually pretty clever - instead of swapping out the entire floor at once (which creates total chaos), they do half the bins every twenty-five minutes while keeping the other half active. Creates this rolling wave of fresh inventory instead of that mad stampede you see at other outlets.
Definitely bring gloves - between the tech stuff and random household items, there's always broken electronics or circuit board pieces that'll cut you up. Parking's usually fine, but here's the pro tip: bring your own collapsible wagon. Shopping carts disappear fast, and when you're hauling tech equipment or camping gear, you want something with better wheels anyway.
The sweet spot for vintage finds is weekday mornings, especially Monday after a big weekend. That's when all the garage sale leftovers and estate liquidation overflow makes its way to the floor. Perfect timing for scoring something truly special from Portland's weird wonderful culture.