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If you’re into thrift shopping around Murray, the Goodwill Store in Murray is a solid stop. Known nationwide for its commitment to community and reusing goods, this Goodwill location carries a wide variety of secondhand items that span from used clothing to household goods. You can expect to find racks of clothes covering casual wear, vintage pieces, and everything in between. It’s one of those places where every visit can surprise you with something new or useful.
Aside from clothing, the Murray Goodwill thrift store has a pretty decent furniture section. You’ll often spot chairs, tables, or bookshelves that just need a little TLC or a fresh coat of paint to fit perfectly into a home. The store also stocks housewares and kitchen items, which makes it a good spot for anyone setting up a space on a budget. Plus, there’s usually a mix of books and sometimes even media like DVDs or vinyl records tucked into the shelves.
Shopping at a Goodwill store means supporting a larger mission: helping people in the community find jobs and training. So beyond the practical side of scoring thrifted goods, there’s a feel-good aspect to buying here. The Murray thrift store experience is straightforward, welcoming, and full of those small secondhand joys that keep thrifting exciting. If you want a place with a consistent variety of useful, affordable finds, this Goodwill location in Murray is worth your time.
Looking for more options? Explore other thrift stores in Murray or visit the Goodwill Store website for details.
Prices here are average goodwill prices. My wife and I have been here a few times and there’s never really a “good find”. The donations here always seem average. Not many video games, the appliance is meh, the glass and furniture is meh. The staff has always been meh. They’re polite but not super friendly when checking out. The layout of the store is kinda weird. The store is pretty clean though! Overall just an average goodwill!
Very friendly staff and clean store. Easy to park. Prices were reasonable. Had a great choice of different types of clothes and footwear. Home goods ect.
The prices here are not great, I saw a basic t-shirt with skulls on it with the tag still on from Ross that said $4.99 they were selling it for $9.99. If people are donating things to you you shouldn't then double the price Edit: won't let me reply, I don't have a picture, the shirt was in the Halloween costume section where everything was priced differently. I wouldn't personally classify it as a Halloween costume, just a t-shirt in the Halloween costume section. I saw the goodwill sticker on the back of the Ross tag it had and it said $9.99. However I also noticed that random stickers will end up on other items as well. I bought a pair of shoes that had a sticker on it that said $5.99, when the cashier rung it up it was $12.99 because there were two different sticker tags on it that I did not see. Its also a little difficult to tell which sticker is the correct one, they have categories printed on them but they're in very tiny text. This very well couldve been the reason it appeared to be priced this way. However I also don't think a standard pricing for all t-shirts being $5.99 is great either. That's just my personal opinion about that, if a $6 t-shirt works for you then that's great. Usually DI will price their basic t-shirts around $2-$4. Edit: none of the Halloween costumes were priced the same from what I saw as well. Which is expected, however the generalizing comment that "every category is priced the same" is not something I can say that I saw.
I don’t know how many times I have been there, that they only have one checker. 5 other employees doing other things that you know can be done when there are fewer customers. The leads/supervisors are the worst. 11 customers in line and one checker. Why can’t your leaders see a line and fill a need? All of the ones that were not checking, clearly looked up at least 10 times and saw the huge line. But no one rose to the occasion. Teach your crew that the customers are important and should come first.
I’ve noticed how prices have shot up here and they don’t offer color tag sales either that I can see. So it’s rarely worth the time. They tend to mark things up to a high premium. I’ve seen rusted out trunks for $90,+, cassette players for $20, amazon/walmart cheap furniture for $40, a lot random garage junk $20-$40. Cheap quality heavily used stuff like this case with foam interior for $25. Who’s going to buy that?