14 Thrift Stores Across Colorado That You Can Browse All Day This Summer

Secondhand shopping is at its best when every aisle feels like it might be hiding a tiny plot twist. Across Colorado, thrift stores turn ordinary errands into full-on treasure hunts, with racks of vintage jackets, shelves of oddball ceramics, stacks of old books, and furniture pieces that seem to arrive with their own backstory.

The fun comes from never knowing whether you will leave with a practical find, a nostalgic surprise, or something so strange it becomes impossible to forget.

Colorado’s secondhand scene stretches far beyond the obvious shopping corridors, reaching mountain towns, college communities, foothill neighborhoods, and small cities with serious browsing potential.

Patient shoppers get rewarded here, especially the ones willing to dig, circle back, and trust their instincts. For anyone who loves affordable finds with personality, a Colorado thrift trip can turn a simple Saturday into a surprisingly memorable adventure.

1. Eco-Thrift – Fort Collins

Eco-Thrift - Fort Collins
© Eco-Thrift

Walking into Eco-Thrift on North Howes Street feels like stepping into the best kind of organized chaos. Located right in the heart of downtown Fort Collins, this locally owned shop has a personality all its own.

The shelves are packed with the sort of everyday items that somehow feel special the moment they are not brand new anymore.

Fort Collins has always had a strong community-minded streak, and this store reflects that spirit beautifully. Shoppers tend to linger here longer than planned, which is honestly the highest compliment any thrift store can receive.

You come in for a mug and leave with a lamp, two flannel shirts, and a board game from 1987.

The location at 314 North Howes Street puts you close to everything else downtown Fort Collins has to offer, so it pairs well with a coffee stop or a lunch break nearby. Go early on a weekday if you want first pick of new arrivals.

Eco-Thrift is the kind of shop that reminds you why buying secondhand is not a compromise but a genuinely rewarding way to shop with intention.

2. Mountain States Children’s Home Thrift Store – Longmont

Mountain States Children's Home Thrift Store - Longmont
© Mountain States Children’s Home Thrift Store

There is something quietly powerful about shopping at a place where every dollar goes toward helping children in need. Mountain States Children’s Home Thrift Store on Coffman Street in Longmont is exactly that kind of shop, and the good feeling you carry out the door is worth as much as whatever you find on the racks.

Longmont sits comfortably between Fort Collins and Boulder, making it an easy addition to any northern Colorado thrift crawl. The store is run by a nonprofit that has been supporting vulnerable kids and families for generations, so the stakes feel a little higher here than at your average resale shop.

That said, the browsing experience is relaxed, friendly, and genuinely well-stocked.

Expect a broad mix of clothing, housewares, books, and the occasional furniture piece that someone else was foolish enough to let go. The community donates generously, which means turnover is steady and surprises are frequent.

If you are building out a thrift route through the Front Range this summer, Longmont deserves a stop, and this store at 818 Coffman Street should be near the top of your list.

3. TRU Thrift Shop – Boulder

TRU Thrift Shop - Boulder
© TRU Thrift Shop

Boulder has a reputation for being health-conscious, outdoorsy, and a little particular about where things come from. TRU Thrift Shop fits right into that identity, operating as a community-facing arm of TRU Community Care and offering shoppers the chance to browse with purpose.

The shop is open Monday through Saturday, with current donation details posted directly by TRU Community Care.

What makes this stop interesting is the connection to something larger. TRU Community Care is known for its hospice and palliative services, and the thrift shop helps fund that mission in a very tangible way.

Shopping here feels less like a transaction and more like a small act of community solidarity, which Boulder tends to appreciate deeply.

The selection rotates regularly, so repeat visits are rewarded. Boulder’s donation culture is robust, meaning the quality of items tends to skew higher than average.

You might find a barely-used piece of outdoor gear sitting next to a stack of well-loved cookbooks, which is a combination that somehow makes complete sense in this town. Check current hours before you go, and consider dropping off a bag of donations while you are at it.

4. Pig + Pearl Secondhand – Boulder

Pig + Pearl Secondhand - Boulder
© Pig + Pearl Secondhand

Pig + Pearl Secondhand has the kind of name that sticks with you, and the shop itself lives up to the intrigue. Situated at 5320 Arapahoe Avenue in Boulder, this weekend-friendly secondhand spot draws shoppers who want something a little more curated than the average thrift run.

In-person shopping days and hours are posted, so a quick check before heading out is always a smart move.

Boulder’s secondhand scene is competitive, but Pig + Pearl holds its own with a selection that feels thoughtful rather than overwhelming. The vibe leans toward the kind of finds that look good on a shelf or in a wardrobe without requiring much imagination.

If you are the type who appreciates a thrift store that has done some of the editing work for you, this is your place.

Pairing a visit here with TRU Thrift Shop makes for a genuinely satisfying Boulder thrift afternoon. The two shops offer different energies, which keeps the experience fresh.

Arapahoe Avenue is easy to navigate, parking is manageable, and the surrounding neighborhood has enough coffee and food options to fuel a full day of browsing without ever feeling rushed.

5. Matchless Treasures Thrift Shop – Leadville

Matchless Treasures Thrift Shop - Leadville
© Matchless Treasures Thrift Shop

Leadville sits at over ten thousand feet above sea level, making it the highest incorporated city in the United States, and Matchless Treasures Thrift Shop fits the altitude with equal character.

Located at 623 Harrison Avenue right on Leadville’s main street, this donation-based nonprofit shop is the sort of place that rewards anyone willing to make the scenic drive up.

Harrison Avenue is Leadville’s historic heart, lined with buildings that carry more than a century of mining-era stories. Shopping at Matchless Treasures feels like part of that living history.

The items on the shelves come from the community itself, which means the selection reflects the rugged, resourceful personality of a town that has always made the most of what it has.

For summer travelers passing through on their way to or from the Sawatch Range, this is an ideal unplanned stop. The shop is compact but worth the time, and the prices tend to be genuinely modest.

Leadville is not a city you rush through anyway, so budget an extra hour, park on Harrison Avenue, and let Matchless Treasures show you what this mountain community has quietly been collecting.

6. Caring & Sharing – Salida

Caring & Sharing - Salida
© Caring & Sharing

Salida has quietly become one of Colorado’s most beloved small towns, drawing artists, river runners, and weekend wanderers in equal measure. Caring and Sharing at 220 West 4th Street fits the town’s generous, community-rooted spirit like a well-worn flannel shirt.

This nonprofit thrift store runs Monday through Saturday, with current hours listed through the Salida Chamber, so planning ahead is easy.

The Arkansas River runs right through Salida, and the town has a way of making visitors feel like they belong. Caring and Sharing extends that warmth into the shopping experience, offering a mix of clothing, housewares, and miscellaneous goods donated by locals who clearly take good care of their things.

The prices are honest and the staff tends to be genuinely friendly.

If you are building a summer road trip through the Arkansas River Valley, Salida is already on most itineraries, and adding a thrift stop here costs nothing but time. The shop is centrally located and easy to find.

Pair it with a walk along the river trail or a meal at one of Salida’s well-regarded local restaurants, and you have a low-effort afternoon that checks multiple boxes without any planning fatigue.

7. Six Points Thrift Store – Gunnison

Six Points Thrift Store - Gunnison
© Six Points Thrift Store

Gunnison is the kind of town that earns its reputation for toughness. It regularly records some of the coldest temperatures in the continental United States during winter, which makes summer the obvious time to visit, and Six Points Thrift Store at 1160 North Main Street gives you a great reason to linger a little longer than planned.

Community thrift stores in smaller towns often carry a different energy than their urban counterparts. There is less competition for the good stuff, which means patient browsers tend to be rewarded.

Six Points is open on weekdays and Saturdays, with posted hours that make scheduling a visit straightforward. The selection reflects the practical, outdoorsy nature of Gunnison’s residents.

Western State Colorado University is in Gunnison, which means the donation pool includes a steady stream of student castoffs alongside the usual community contributions. That combination produces some genuinely interesting finds.

Whether you are passing through on the way to Crested Butte or spending a full day exploring the Gunnison Valley, a stop at Six Points is worth working into the route. Main Street is easy to navigate, and the shop is exactly the kind of unhurried experience that fits the pace of a summer road trip through this part of Colorado.

8. Community Options Thrift Store – Montrose

Community Options Thrift Store - Montrose
© Montrose

Montrose sits at the gateway to the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, one of Colorado’s most dramatic and undervisited national parks. Community Options Thrift Store at 420 North Townsend Avenue gives you a compelling reason to spend a little more time in town before or after the canyon.

Updated 2026 hours are posted, which is a small but genuinely useful detail for anyone planning ahead.

Montrose has grown steadily in recent years, and the donation base at Community Options reflects a community that is both established and expanding. The selection tends to cover a wide range, from clothing and books to furniture and household goods.

It is the sort of store where you can easily lose track of time, which on a summer road trip is a feature rather than a bug.

North Townsend Avenue is Montrose’s main commercial corridor, lined with local businesses that reward explorers willing to slow down. Community Options fits naturally into a morning of town-center browsing before heading out to the canyon rim or the Uncompahgre Valley.

The prices are fair, the space is manageable, and the staff tends to know their inventory well enough to point you in the right direction if you have something specific in mind.

9. Second Chance Humane Society Ridgway Thrift Shop – Ridgway

Second Chance Humane Society Ridgway Thrift Shop - Ridgway
© Second Chance Thrift Store

Ridgway is one of those small Colorado towns that stops you cold the first time you see it, surrounded by the jagged skyline of the San Juan Mountains with a main street that feels like it was designed specifically for slow, appreciative walking. Second Chance Humane Society Ridgway Thrift Shop at 314 Sherman Street adds a genuinely heartwarming layer to a visit here.

The shop supports animal welfare across San Miguel, Ouray, and Montrose counties, which is a wide net of good work for a small-town thrift operation. Every purchase goes toward the care of animals waiting for their second chance, which gives the browsing experience a quiet sense of purpose that is hard to manufacture.

The selection rotates with the generosity of the surrounding communities.

Ridgway draws a mix of ranchers, artists, and outdoor enthusiasts, and the donations tend to reflect that eclectic mix. You might find a pair of nearly new hiking boots next to a hand-thrown ceramic bowl next to a stack of Western novels.

Sherman Street is easy to find and easy to park on. If you are routing through Ouray County this summer, Ridgway deserves more than a drive-through, and this thrift shop is a good reason to stop and stay awhile.

10. United Methodist Thrift Shop – Durango

United Methodist Thrift Shop - Durango
© United Methodist Thrift Shop

Durango has a way of collecting loyal fans, the kind of people who visit once and start quietly planning their return before they have even left town.

The United Methodist Thrift Shop on East 2nd Avenue between 9th and 10th Streets has been part of Durango’s community fabric for a long time, and that longevity shows in the way it operates.

Current weekday and Saturday hours are posted, making it easy to slot into a day of exploring.

Long-running local thrift shops carry a different kind of energy than newer operations. There is institutional knowledge here, a sense that the people running the store genuinely understand what the community needs and what it tends to donate.

The selection reflects that steady, reliable quality that only comes with years of consistent community engagement.

Durango rewards walkers, and East 2nd Avenue is close enough to downtown that you can pair a thrift stop with a meal, a coffee, or a stroll along the Animas River. The Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad depot is nearby, which means the town already has a built-in sense of occasion.

The United Methodist Thrift Shop adds a grounded, neighborhood-level counterpoint to all that tourist-facing energy, and that contrast is part of its considerable charm.

11. La Plata County Humane Society Thrift Store – Durango

La Plata County Humane Society Thrift Store - Durango
© La Plata County Humane Society Thrift Store

Two thrift shops in one town might sound like overkill, but Durango earns the double stop. La Plata County Humane Society Thrift Store at 1111 South Camino del Rio operates with a clear mission: supporting the animals in the care of the La Plata County Humane Society.

That connection gives the shopping experience a layer of meaning that goes beyond the usual treasure hunt.

South Camino del Rio runs along the Animas River corridor, which means the drive to this store is genuinely scenic. The location is a bit more spread out than downtown Durango, which tends to mean easier parking and a slightly different shopper demographic than the 2nd Avenue shop.

Together, the two stores offer a complete picture of Durango’s secondhand culture.

The selection here covers clothing, furniture, housewares, and the occasional standout piece that makes you feel like you earned it. Animal welfare organizations tend to inspire generous donations from communities that care, and Durango is very much that kind of community.

If you are spending a full day in town, hitting both humane society and United Methodist shops gives you a satisfying thrift circuit that supports two very different but equally worthy local causes.

12. Community Thrift & Treasures – Glenwood Springs

Community Thrift & Treasures - Glenwood Springs
© Community Thrift & Treasure

Glenwood Springs already has the hot springs, the canyon, and the gondola going for it. Community Thrift and Treasures at 2518 South Glen Avenue adds another reason to linger, and unlike the other attractions, this one does not require a ticket.

The shop is open daily, which is a genuine rarity in the thrift world and a major convenience for road-trippers with flexible schedules.

The inventory here spans clothing, home goods, furniture, and more, making it one of the more comprehensive stops on this list. Daily operations mean the stock turns over at a healthy pace, and the nonprofit structure ensures that what you spend stays connected to the community.

Glenwood Springs sits along I-70, making it one of the most accessible towns on this entire Colorado thrift tour.

South Glen Avenue is straightforward to find, and the shop has enough floor space to justify a real browsing session rather than a quick scan-and-leave visit. If you are driving across the state this summer and need a break from the highway, Glenwood Springs delivers on multiple levels.

Community Thrift and Treasures is the kind of stop that makes you glad you pulled off the interstate, rested your legs, and gave yourself permission to poke around for a while.

13. New Horizons Thrift Store – Canon City

New Horizons Thrift Store - Canon City
© New Horizons Thrift Store

Canon City sits at the edge of the Royal Gorge, one of Colorado’s most jaw-dropping natural features, and New Horizons Thrift Store at 3170 East Main Street offers a grounded, community-rooted counterpoint to all that geological drama. This is described as a large thrift store, which in practical terms means more floor space, more variety, and more time happily spent wandering the aisles.

Large thrift stores operate on a different logic than smaller boutique shops. The sheer volume of donations means the selection is broad and the surprises are frequent.

Shopping and donation hours are posted, which helps whether you are planning a browsing trip or hoping to offload a carload of items before continuing your Colorado summer travels.

East Main Street is Canon City’s commercial backbone, and New Horizons fits naturally into a morning of exploring what this often-overlooked corner of Colorado has to offer. The Royal Gorge is nearby for obvious reasons, but the town itself has a quiet confidence that rewards curious visitors.

A stop at New Horizons is the kind of low-pressure, high-reward experience that makes a road trip feel genuinely lived-in rather than just checked off a list of scenic overlooks and national park stamps.

14. Assistance League Pueblo Thrift Store – Pueblo

Assistance League Pueblo Thrift Store - Pueblo
© Pueblo

Pueblo often gets overlooked in favor of Colorado’s more glamorous mountain towns, but anyone who has spent real time there knows it carries a distinct, steely character that is entirely its own.

Assistance League Pueblo Thrift Store at 1112 Pueblo Boulevard Way is volunteer-run and open Tuesday through Saturday, which speaks to the kind of dedicated community effort that keeps a shop like this thriving year after year.

Volunteer-run operations have a particular texture to them. The people behind the counter are there because they believe in the mission, not because it is a job, and that enthusiasm tends to show up in how the store is organized and how customers are treated.

The Assistance League model has a long national history of channeling thrift proceeds into community programs, and Pueblo’s chapter is no exception.

Pueblo Boulevard Way is easy to find, and the shop is well worth the drive to the southern end of the Front Range. If you are looping back from a southern Colorado road trip through Salida, Canon City, or Trinidad, Pueblo makes a logical and rewarding final stop.

Walk in expecting a well-organized, purposeful secondhand experience, and you are very unlikely to leave disappointed or empty-handed.