If I could only bid on one type of storage unit for the rest of my career, I'd pick tool units every single time. No other category in the storage auction world offers the same combination of high resale value, consistent demand, and relatively easy selling process. Storage auction tools are, hands down, the highest-margin category I've worked with.

Here's everything I've learned about finding, evaluating, testing, and selling tools from storage units.


Why Tools Are King at Storage Auctions

A few things make tools uniquely valuable compared to other storage auction finds:

For a broader look at what's worth finding in units beyond tools, check out the guide on best items to find in storage units.


Brands That Hold Value

Not all tools are created equal. Brand matters enormously in the resale market. Here's my tier list based on years of actual sales data.

Tier 1: Premium brands (highest resale)

Tier 2: Solid brands (good resale)

Tier 3: Budget brands (limited resale)


Testing Storage Auction Tools Before You Sell

Selling untested tools is leaving money on the table and inviting returns. Every tool from a storage unit needs at least basic testing before listing.

Corded power tools

Plug them in. Do they turn on? Do they run smoothly or make grinding/clicking noises? Check the cord for damage — frayed cords are a safety hazard and a reason to disclose or repair before selling. Run the tool under load if possible (cut a piece of scrap wood, drill a hole). A tool that runs but bogs down under load has motor issues.

Cordless power tools

You need a charged battery to test, which is a common problem with storage auction finds — the tool might be there but the battery and charger are dead or missing. If you buy Milwaukee or DeWalt units frequently, keep a few charged batteries on hand for testing purposes. Note in your listing whether the tool is tested and working or untested/sold as-is. Tested tools sell for 30-50% more than untested ones.

Hand tools

Check for excessive wear, rust, and damage. Ratchets should click smoothly in both directions. Wrenches should be straight (sight down the length). Socket sets — count the pieces and note which ones are missing. A 200-piece socket set missing 15 sockets is still valuable, but buyers need to know.

Specialty and automotive tools

Torque wrenches should be checked for calibration if possible. Diagnostic scanners should power on and show a menu. Air tools need a compressor to test — if you don't have one, sell as-is with that disclosure. Welders should arc when connected to power with a test piece.


Pricing Storage Auction Tools

Tool pricing is straightforward because of the model number system. Here's my process:

  1. Find the model number. It's stamped, engraved, or on a label somewhere on every tool. This is your search key.
  2. Check eBay sold listings. Search the model number, filter by sold items, and look at the last 10-15 sales. Average the prices for items in similar condition to yours.
  3. Adjust for condition and completeness. Bare tool (no battery/charger): price at 50-65% of a complete kit's sold price. With original case: add 10-15%. With original accessories and manual: add another 5-10%. Cosmetic wear but functional: price at 80-90% of clean examples.
  4. Price competitively but not desperately. List at or slightly below the average sold price. Tools sell steadily — you don't need to undercut dramatically. They'll move within 1-3 weeks at fair market price.

Where to Sell Storage Auction Tools

eBay

Best for: brand-name power tools, complete kits, specialty tools, Snap-On, anything with a model number and national demand. eBay is where you'll get the highest prices because you're reaching a national buyer pool. Ship in original cases when possible. For more on the eBay selling process, see the guide on how to sell storage auction finds.

Facebook Marketplace

Best for: larger equipment (table saws, miter saws, air compressors), bulk lots, lower-value hand tools. Local pickup eliminates shipping costs and hassles. Price 10-20% below eBay sold prices since you're saving on fees and shipping.

Craigslist

Still surprisingly effective for tools in many markets. Contractors and tradespeople check Craigslist habitually. Good for higher-value items where you want cash transactions without platform fees.

Pawn shops and tool resellers

Quick cash but low returns — typically 30-50% of retail. Only worth it for items you need to move immediately or that aren't worth the effort of listing individually. Some areas have dedicated used tool stores that buy in volume at slightly better rates.

Flea markets and swap meets

Can be effective if you have volume. A table full of sorted, clean tools at a weekend flea market will draw buyers. Price everything to sell — people at flea markets are looking for deals, not fair market value.


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Red Flags for Tool Units

Not every unit with tools visible is a good buy. Here are the warning signs I've learned to watch for:

Scattered loose tools with no organization

A professional tradesperson stores tools in cases, chests, and organized bags. Loose tools thrown into a pile suggest the owner wasn't a serious user — which means the tools are more likely budget brands, incomplete sets, or damaged items. Organized tool storage is a green flag. Chaos is a yellow flag.

Visible rust and water damage

Storage units leak. If you can see rust on visible tools or water stains on boxes, assume the damage extends to everything you can't see. Rusted tools still sell but at steep discounts, and some are unsalvageable. The haul might not be worth it if the unit has obvious moisture damage.

Only budget brands visible

If every tool you can identify through the door is Ryobi, Harbor Freight, or no-name, don't expect hidden Milwaukee in the back. People who buy premium tend to buy premium across the board. The same is true for budget buyers. What you see in front is usually representative of what's behind it.

Mixed household and tools

A unit that's half furniture and half tools is usually a personal storage unit from a homeowner, not a contractor's dedicated tool storage. The tools in these units tend to be consumer-grade. It's not necessarily a bad buy — just set your expectations accordingly and bid based on what you can verify, not what you're hoping is hidden in the back.

Too many bidders

Tool units attract experienced buyers. If the bid count is high and climbing fast, other people see the same value you do. Stick to your number. The math only works if you buy at the right price — overpaying on a tool unit because you got caught in a bidding war turns a great category into a marginal one.


Building a Tool Flipping System

If you focus on storage auction tools as your primary category, here's how to build an efficient operation:


Tools are the single best category in the storage auction game. They're easy to evaluate from photos, easy to test, easy to price, easy to ship, and they sell fast. If you're new to storage auctions and wondering where to focus your learning, start by getting good at spotting and valuing tools. Everything else is secondary.