Updated May 29, 2026

Thrift and second-hand shopping in Canada

A practical reference on where second-hand clothing comes from, how to judge quality before buying, and how to build a wardrobe from pre-owned items. Written for shoppers across Canadian cities, from Toronto to Vancouver.

Shelves of donated second-hand items inside a community thrift store
Donated goods sorted on shelves in a community thrift store. Photo via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0.

What second-hand shopping looks like in Canada

Second-hand shopping in Canada spans several distinct channels: large for-profit chains, charity-run shops, independent vintage boutiques, consignment stores, and community-run sales. Each operates differently in how it sources stock, prices items, and rotates inventory. Understanding those differences is the first step to shopping efficiently.

Interest in buying pre-owned has grown alongside cost-of-living pressure. A 2025 survey by Habitat for Humanity Canada reported that more than 80 percent of Canadians agreed that thrifting "simply makes sense" under current conditions, and a TD Bank survey found a notable share of respondents planning to choose lower-cost alternatives such as buying second-hand. These figures are drawn from the publicly reported survey summaries cited below.

Three areas to start with

Store types

For-profit chains, charity shops, vintage boutiques, consignment, and outlet bins each price and rotate stock differently. Knowing which is which saves both money and time.

Read about store types →

Quality checks

A short, repeatable inspection routine covering seams, fabric, zippers, odours, and fit reduces the chance of bringing home unusable items.

Read the quality checklist →

Sustainable wardrobe

Building a working wardrobe from second-hand pieces relies on planning gaps, neutral bases, and realistic care routines rather than impulse buys.

Read the wardrobe guide →

How discount rotations work

Large Canadian chains such as Value Village (operating as Talize in parts of Ontario) commonly use colour-coded price-tag rotations, where a specific tag colour is discounted for a set period before rotating to the next colour. Shoppers who check current in-store signage or a chain's app can time purchases against the active discount colour.

Donation volume also rises seasonally, with larger surges around spring cleaning and late-summer transitions, which affects how much fresh stock appears on the floor. Specific colours, dates, and discount percentages vary by retailer and location, so confirm them locally rather than assuming a fixed schedule.

Interior of a charity shop with organized racks of donated clothing
A charity-run second-hand shop interior. Photo via Wikimedia Commons, CC0.

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Publicly available sources

  • Habitat for Humanity Canada — reported 2025 survey on Canadian attitudes toward thrifting.
  • Global News — coverage of TD Bank survey data and second-hand retail trends in Canada.
  • Value Village — official description of its donation and resale cycle.