Thrifting involves buying secondhand items that are resold for a fraction of the normal price. You can find many valuable treasures in thrift shops. From home decor to clothing to antique figurines, there are endless options for every shopper in thrift stores.
Here are eight reasons why thrifting is the superior way to shop.
You Can Find New Items for Cheap Prices
Some thrift stores sell “open box” items. These usually include high-end products from retailers that have overstock or lots of returned items. Open box items are often in perfect, brand-new condition and sell for a fraction of the price they would be on the retailer’s shelf [1].
If you have expensive tastes, thrifting can save you a pretty penny.
Get Undamaged and Working Items
You don’t have to worry about open box sales being damaged or suspicious.
Manufacturers that don’t accept open box returns will sell these items to bargain shops and thrift stores for a much lower price. Most items go through inspection to make sure they’re still in good shape, especially electronics.
It Reduces Waste
Traditional shopping sprees create a lot of waste in the form of packaging, display materials, shopping bags, and discarded items. But you can feel good about buying secondhand from thrift stores, as it reduces the burden on the environment [2].
When people resell clothing and other everyday items, it means fewer products are going into landfills or being recycled for their materials.
Recycling Isn’t Always Best
Clothing is often thrown away or sent to recycling plants. This creates several problems, especially in overfilled recycling plants that can’t keep up with the volume of items they receive. When you go thrift shopping, you’re keeping someone else’s unused items in circulation and reducing waste.
Your Finds Are Often Unique
Anyone can head to their local department stores and buy the same things that everyone else owns. When trends hit, whatever is “in style” tends to get the most sales. The downside to this is that it becomes harder to curate one-of-a-kind wardrobes and interior design styles.
Thrift stores, on the other hand, offer unique items that come from many different time stores, scenes, cultures, and time periods, meaning you can dress yourself (and your home) up however you like without replicating someone else’s style.
For those who like to stand out, thrift shopping is the superior choice.
You Don’t Contribute to Fast Fashion
“Fast fashion” is an ethical problem that has been coming to light across the world in recent years.
Most mainstream clothing brands use so-called fast fashion pieces to maintain large profit margins. They buy low-quality, cheap clothing and accessories from mass distributors who employ impoverished workers. These workers often face dangerous working conditions, extremely low pay, and exploitation.
The Modern Rise of Fast Fashion
Fast fashion has been on the rise recently because of how easy it’s become for online retailers to sell cheap clothing directly to consumers. These items are shipped from overseas and cost significantly less than more carefully made “slow fashion” pieces.
When you go thrifting, you’re removing yourself from the fast fashion pipeline and reusing previously produced items. This is a big deal in terms of social consciousness and ethical consumerism. Thrift shopping essentially shrinks your footprint on the unscrupulous fast fashion industry [3].
You Can Do It Online
These days, there are many convenient apps and websites that allow you to get your thrifting done right from your smartphone. This saves quite a bit of time and energy.
Clothing, home goods, electronics, art, and antiques are all available online in various resell spheres. You can find exactly what you’re looking for (along with some excitingly unexpected finds) with a few taps, all from the comfort of your couch.
It Supports Charities
Most thrift stores use a percentage of their revenue to contribute to local charities. When you buy secondhand items at your local thrift shop, you could be supporting environmentally-friendly charities, homeless shelters, veterans organizations, animal protection groups, and more.
Not only are you reducing the social and environmental burdens of consumerism, but you’re also keeping helpful charities afloat. What’s not to love?
It Can Save Water
It might sound strange, but thrift shopping can potentially save hundreds of gallons of water per purchase.
On average, it takes more than 400 gallons of water to produce a single cotton T-shirt [4]. This means that when you buy used clothing, you are reducing the strain on the water supply and aiding conservation efforts.
If the demand for new fashion items goes down, the world will use less water overall on clothing production. This would have significant environmental impacts. In various parts of the world, droughts are a serious concern. Not having access to clean, usable water makes survival difficult for communities in these areas.
Help save vulnerable populations by reducing water use through thrift shopping.
It Makes Damaged Items More Affordable to Repair
In the modern world, many people are used to just buying new items when something doesn’t work right or gets too old. However, thrifting offers a unique opportunity to repair items and clothing.
When you buy items at such low prices, the cost of repairing them suddenly becomes worth the investment. Ordinary stores don’t offer this advantage, as they often charge much more for the original product. Buying from thrift stores gives you the chance to repair things yourself and get more value out of them in the long run.
Go Thrifting for Your Clothing and Decor Needs
All in all, thrift stores and secondhand shops are the way to go when you feel the need to change up your style. You get cool items that you don’t come across just anywhere, and you’ll often be the only person you know who owns them. This is especially true when it comes to one-of-a-kind vintage scores.
Consider making the switch to thrift shopping. By doing so, you stand to save money, time, and the world all at once.
References:
[2] https://www.discovermagazine.com/environment/just-how-environmentally-friendly-is-thrifting
[4] https://sustainablecampus.fsu.edu/blog/clothed-conservation-fashion-water