Amazon FBA lets Amazon handle storage, shipping, and customer service for your products. But is it the right path for you?
May 9
Clearance sales offer Amazon sellers a golden opportunity to score brand-new products at 50 to 90% off the retail price. This pricing gap creates the perfect arbitrage scenario. You can buy low locally, sell high on Amazon, and pocket the difference.
Thus, it’s no wonder that clearance arbitrage remains one of the most accessible entry points into Amazon selling. It requires minimal startup capital, provides fast inventory turnover, and helps you learn the Amazon ecosystem quickly.
Let’s dive into how you can build a systematic approach to finding, evaluating, and profiting from clearance opportunities year-round.
Clearance arbitrage delivers some of the highest ROI potential in the Amazon seller ecosystem. Imagine, when you buy an item at 70% off retail ($15 instead of $50), you can price it at $40 on Amazon, pay approximately $10 in fees, and walk away with $15 profit on a $15 investment. A clean 100% ROI.
But beyond the impressive margins, clearance arbitrage offers more advantages:
Successful clearance arbitrage requires being systematic when it comes to where you’re sourcing. While there are seasonal sales that are somewhat predictable, you have to be able to find profitable clearance deals in any month. Here are some tips.
Walmart’s clearance system offers some of the richest opportunities for arbitrage sellers, especially if you understand their markdown patterns.
Walmart frequently uses “hidden clearance,” where items ring up for less than the price shown on the shelf tag. This happens when centralized price drops haven’t been updated on local tags.
Always use the Walmart app to scan barcodes and check current prices. An item with a yellow $15 clearance sticker might actually ring up for $5 or less at checkout.
Look for items with yellow clearance stickers, but don’t limit yourself to the dedicated clearance sections. Clearance items can be scattered throughout departments, especially end caps and back walls.
Target follows a fairly consistent markdown pattern: items start at 30% off, then move to 50%, 70%, and sometimes 90% off over several weeks.
Target also uses a unique pricing code system. Check the upper right corner of clearance tags for a small number that indicates the discount percentage (e.g., “30” means 30% off).
Another hack is to use the Target app to price-check items in-store. If an item shows a lower “clearance” price in the app but still has a regular price tag in-store, you can usually get the clearance price at checkout.
Lastly, follow the seasonal rhythm of retail. Back-to-school items hit clearance in late September, summer items in August, and winter items in February.
Beyond the big box stores, several other retailers offer predictable clearance opportunities worth exploring.
TJ Maxx/Marshalls/HomeGoods
These related stores use a tag color system to indicate clearance status. White tags show regular prices, while red tags indicate the first markdown. When you see yellow tags, that’s the final clearance price. Typically, the best deals.
Clearance items are both in dedicated clearance sections and mixed throughout regular merchandise. Always check back corners and endcaps for the highest concentration of marked-down products. The best sections for arbitrage are usually home goods, toys, and brand-name kitchenware.
ROSS
ROSS uses small pink “REDUCED” stickers placed on top of original price tags. When you see multiple stickers stacked on one tag, that item has been marked down several times and is likely at its lowest price.
ROSS excels in brand-name closeouts in apparel, shoes, toys, and home goods. Their irregular inventory patterns mean each visit can yield completely different finds.
Specialty and regional stores
Don’t overlook smaller retailers and regional department stores. These often have less competition from other resellers and can provide unique inventory opportunities.
Online liquidation platforms like B-Stock provide access to bulk clearance lots directly from major retailers. These work best for experienced sellers ready to scale up their clearance operations.
Outlet malls, especially those with brand-name stores, frequently run end-of-season clearance events where high-quality merchandise can be found at 70-80% off retail.
The key to profitable clearance arbitrage is quickly evaluating items in-store. This is where Seller 365 and its scanning tools give you a decisive edge.
ScoutIQ is the best choice for book flippers or those focusing on reselling media items. Simply scan a product barcode and instantly see:
Scoutify takes scanning efficiency even further. Beyond standard pricing data, Scoutify shows:
Using these tools, you can scan hundreds of clearance items in a single sourcing trip, quickly identifying the 10-20% of products that offer genuine profit potential.
Beyond knowing where and when to shop, there are several more advanced strategies to maximize the results you’re gonna get.
Regular, respectful interactions with store employees can yield insider information about upcoming markdowns. Retail workers often know when clearance scans are scheduled days in advance.
Store managers and department leads also have discretion in further discounting clearance items that haven’t sold. A good relationship might mean an extra 10-20% off already discounted merchandise.
Never argue about prices or leave messes while scanning. The fastest way to lose clearance opportunities is earning a reputation as a difficult reseller.
Long-term storage strategy matters when buying seasonal clearance for future resale. Climate-controlled storage prevents damage to items that might sit for months before peak selling season returns.
Label clearance inventory clearly with purchase date, source, cost, and target sale period. This prevents forgotten inventory and helps track long-term ROI on seasonal holds.
Set calendar reminders to prep and list seasonal items 30-45 days before their peak demand period. Easter items bought on clearance should be listed by early February the following year.
Factor storage costs into your clearance ROI calculations. A 90% discount isn’t as profitable if you need to pay for storage space for 9-10 months.
Bulky seasonal items like holiday decorations and lawn furniture offer huge markdowns but require significant storage space. Focus on smaller items if your storage is limited.
Some seasonal items can be “cross-purposed” to sell in multiple seasons. Christmas lights can be marketed as wedding or patio décor year-round, reducing the seasonal storage burden.
Even experienced sellers make costly clearance sourcing mistakes. Knowing the common pitfalls will help protect your profits.
Here are just some common pitfalls in clearance arbitrage:
Instead, always calculate your all-in ROI. Include the purchase price, shipping to Amazon, FBA fees, and potential storage fees if the item might sell slowly.
Check competitive pricing using Scoutify or the Amazon Seller app before purchasing. If dozens of sellers already offer the item at prices near your potential buy cost, profitability will be limited.
Plus, examine sales rank history, not just current rank. A toy might show strong sales rank during December but sell slowly the rest of the year.
Here’s when to pass on “great deals”
Once you’ve mastered the basics of clearance arbitrage, these strategies will help you grow from occasional finds to consistent, scalable profits.
Plan efficient sourcing routes that hit multiple retailers in a geographic sequence to minimize drive time. Consider overnight sourcing trips to larger cities within a few hours’ drive. After all, a well-planned 2-day sourcing trip can yield more inventory than weeks of local searching.
Alternatively, you can partner with family members or trusted friends to divide and conquer. Two people can scan different sections of a store to double your sourcing capacity.
As mentioned above, you don’t need to do everything on your own. But when you do, make sure to create simple scanning guidelines for helpers or employees with clear buy parameters. Think: minimum ROI, acceptable sales rank ranges, and approved categories.
Start new helpers in straightforward departments like toys or home goods before moving to more complex categories like electronics or apparel.
Schedule regular review sessions to analyze what’s selling well and refine sourcing criteria based on real results.
Document every clearance purchase with source, date, purchase price, and expected selling season. This data will become important for planning future sourcing.
Track sell-through rates on seasonal items to refine purchasing strategy. If Christmas decorations purchased in January don’t sell well the following November, adjust your buying parameters.
Use inventory aging reports to identify slow-moving stock and create promotions or bundles to accelerate sales before long-term storage fees apply.
Beyond scanning tools, Seller 365 can also help in every other aspect of your clearance reselling business:
Finding that 90% off sticker feels amazing, but turning it into actual profit takes more than luck.
The math already works beautifully when you nail the process: buy dirt cheap, sell for solid margins, repeat with confidence. But with the right tools and strategy, you can build an even more sustainable business.
Seller 365 provides the complete toolkit you need to excel. From in-store scanning with ScoutIQ and Scoutify to seamless listing with InventoryLab and automated repricing with SmartRepricer, every step of your workflow is covered in one subscription. And it only costs $69/month.
Remember: clearance arbitrage rewards the prepared and punishes the disorganized. Get the tools that stack the odds firmly in your favor.
Give Seller 365 a spin for free for up to 14 days. Get started with a free trial now.
Yes, reselling clearance items is completely legal under the first-sale doctrine. Once you purchase an item legitimately, you own it and can resell it, even if it’s marked “not for resale.” Major retailers sometimes discourage reselling through quantity limits, but they cannot legally prevent you from reselling items you’ve purchased.
Amazon explicitly allows the resale of new, authentic products purchased from retail stores. Their own seller guidelines acknowledge retail arbitrage as a common and acceptable sourcing method.
The key restriction is product condition. Items sold as “New” must be exactly that: unopened, unused, and in original packaging. Clearance items with damaged packaging should be listed as “Used – Like New” instead.
To be safe, be aware of Amazon’s category and brand restrictions (“gating”).
Most major retailers allow returns of clearance items within their standard return window (typically 30-90 days) as long as you have a receipt. Walmart, Target, and Amazon all honor their normal return policies for clearance merchandise.
The main exception is items explicitly marked as “Final Sale” or “No Returns,” which are occasionally used for extreme clearance events or seasonal merchandise at the very end of its selling cycle.