Sage advice from a young guy here.I'm going to go on a tangent here that may not be well received considering that this forum seemingly skews older. Being one of the few younger guys in the family who actually works on things, I've helped clear out numerous relative's garages. In essence, my advice boils down to get rid of it now.
By that, I don't mean sell off all of your hand tools or things that you use regularly. I'm talking about those of you who have amassed a large amount of metallic dust collectors. At best, you will have someone like me to help make sense of things and ensure that your tool collection does not go unused and/or ends up in the hands of someone that will appreciate them. More often, those things you cherished will end up dumped at an estate sale. Whatever is left will end up in a 40 yard dumpster the Monday after the sale concludes.
That vise collection that you've amassed over the past decade? Sell them now while they are worth money. Use it as a means to network with other tool guys, especially those of you who have nobody to pass things onto.
Are you sitting on an old Bridgeport that hasn't been used in a decade? Extract the value now before your family sells it for scrap. I assure you, the amount of money you spend paying the local engine builder to resurface a few sets of heads between now and then is less than what you'd get out of a good mill.
Old trinkets like milk cans, horse draw bars, etc.? These will likely go straight into the trash if they don't end up on the wall of your local brunch restaurant.
The biggest offender, however, is the amount of small parts. This stuff will also go straight in the trash, no matter how organized. I FULLY understand the mindset of having to repurpose things and making do. Keeping around mason jars full of old nails, cabinet hinges, and other building materials is not helping anyone. Contact your local Habitat for Humanity and see if you can donate them. If the need arises for a few misc. screws and such, pick them up piecemeal from your corner hardware store.
For everything else, have a specific plan with regards to how you want your belongings to be divided after you pass and make sure that it is put into writing.
I say all of the above not out of spite, but respect. I've seen the pride and joy of too many men pieced out and sold to the lowest bidder. Unfortunately, that happens more frequently when the person's belongings are too large, too voluminous, or too disorganized. Use the culling of your collections as a means to network with like-minded individuals and pass knowledge and tooling down to the next generation, be it blood related or otherwise.
Ah, but we like doing this stuff, no? Maybe you would have been a good boy in this life.If I need tools to fix stuff in the afterlife, than I've been a bad boy in this life.
I mean, at the end of the day it's not "your problem" since you'd be dead.
Ideally if one wants their stuff while living, "post-life" sale is ones only option. An executor of a will could perhaps liquefy any remaining assets, including tools? That then begs the question, liquefy assets for what purpose?
I think that's a real first question. The money doesn't matter if you're in the ground, so assuming you anything remaining when you're deceased, what is the "goal" of your legacy? Assuming we'll have one adult after all, and don't end up spending down all remaining assets on some horrible fate like dementia care.
told my wife the same thing.I told my wife to call an auctioneer
Alas I had the same situation. Unfortunately he died on the waiting list for cancer treatment. He had hope right to the end that there was help.My Dad left behind a grand mess. Once he knew the end was nigh,
This is a great post, and obviously born of a tough experience.My Dad left behind a grand mess. Once he knew the end was nigh, he did his best to give away as much as he could to family and friends far and wide, and asked my sister and I to do our best to do the same before auctioning off the rest. But it was still weeks and weeks of hauling and scrapping and trashing and cleaning.
You don't always get a warning, though. And even if you're not a hoarder, it's something to think about.
That said, sometimes people are reluctant to accept things you're giving away because it might feel like you're giving up, or it's morbid, or they don't want to take advantage. So you have to invent some other creative excuses sometimes to move stuff along.
Or, just move it along for your own sake, so you can better enjoy the use of your tools and stuff while you're still above ground. For example, WAYYYYYY too many people hang on to WAYYYYY too much scrap and extra materials. Pretty soon you're literally up to your ears in 2x4 scraps and clearance plumbing fittings, and you can't safely actually, y'know, DO anything.
And since this is on your mind, stop buying **** just because you can or it's a good deal. Yeah, you might pay more for the wood for that boat later on, but storing the materials for 20 years bears a cost of its own.
As far as estate auctions, they're a method of getting rid of stuff quickly, but they're not a way to get the most money. Even on the open market, it's a safe bet that your tools are not worth anywhere near what you think they're worth.
If it worries you, make sure your wishes as to where your things go are known.
Also, don't try to burden your heirs with instructions. If a batch of tools goes to a nephew or whatever, he might be able to use them or he might sell them. It's not up to you, so please don't threaten to haunt people...
With my Dad's stuff, there's a lot I took because I can and do use it, but the vast majority was given away and some was sold in the auction. Quite a lot was too damaged to be recoverable, and had to be scrapped.
I know you were (probably) joking, but having spent multiple weekends of long, grueling, disgusting days digging through the six storage sheds my aunt left behind (thankfully those were all we knew about) that were full of 'treasures', and with full apologies for the rant, I'd say this:I might be a hoarder.
Ha , that doesn't work with family. I had a trailer i stored .Even though i paid it was like they were doing me a favor, and when they needed something it was supposed to be fixed for free and within a given time frame. I paid for and put a light up so I could see at night to get it backed in. It was a 45 ft goose. Next year they had me move it so some hunters could use the space. WTF? Reminds me i need to go shoot that light out.,My brother has storage units all over the DFW metro area. One of them still has stuff from his first marriage that ended in 2001. Every time he moves it seems like he ends up with another storage unit full of stuff. Several are full of dated or obsolete inventory for his business.
He just bought a new house on acreage, I offered to put up a small (12 units + covered boat and RV spaces) mini-storage on the property and rent them all out to him so he could consolidate everything in one place.
I wasn't kidding, it would have been extremely profitable.
I have path's though a 1000 sq ft,I know you were (probably) joking, but having spent multiple weekends of long, grueling, disgusting days digging through the six storage sheds my aunt left behind (thankfully those were all we knew about) that were full of 'treasures', and with full apologies for the rant, I'd say this:
Get rid of stuff.
In my aunt's case, it was a bunch of $2 **** from Goodwill (literally - most still had the price tag and were still in the bag from the store), milk crates filled with unopened bottles of wine and lots and lots of groceries - biscuit mix was popular and lots of other complete junk. Across the units you could see phases as well as the consistent staples (picture frames, for example). But there was a 1% of stuff that was important to my mom or the family sprinkled in, and a few gems from Goodwill. I did rescue a sorta-cool industrial table that we've decided to keep around. This is after a little elbow-grease:Dont know what the answer is but shame of the whole thing is , you keep or horded stuff that is valuable to you, maybe tools you needed and used for your job, maybe a classic car then it gets put into a estate sale.


Yes All, while I haven't put actual price tags on items, I'm planning on doing this exact thing in a list. Have too many rare and unique and unusual items, that noone will have any idea how to price.I've thought about putting dated price tags on everything in my garage, so that my wife will at least have a ball park range of what any given item was typically worth on the open market at the time I priced it.
It was amusing to read how some GJ'rs don't want their wives to get a dime, but I want to help my wife recover as much value as possible for the tools and machines that I keep and still use until my time is up.
I would ask if anyone else has pre-priced their items, garage sale style, in anticipation of not being alive to advise on what to sell them for, and how it worked out in the end. But obviously such persons would no longer be available to report on how it worked out in the end.
Someone did, and I thank Him.I would ask if anyone else has pre-priced their items, garage sale style,
I buy most of the stuff that goes for almost nothing used, in used form for very little, I only buy things new that I need now or can't find a deal on used, or wouldn't want to risk it being a dud.I bought a small rubbermaid tote full of dirty PLVMB sockets at an estate sale for $5. Probably had 40+ sockets, extensions, adapters, stud extractors, etc. Traded most of it to another GJ member. Same day, across the street at a yard sale bought a dozen Unibits for $3, and three unopened boxes of Klein screw anchors for a buck apiece.
What I have learned at the few estate sales I have been to is that hand tools and fasterners are usually underpriced and anything with a cord or motor is usually overpriced. I've seen people wallk past a cigar box for of high-quality USA made drill bits priced at $5 to fight over a HarborFreight cordless drill at $30. I'm the guy walking out with the drill bits.
Very few people want to take the time to ascertain the "value" of individual sockets, screwdrivers, pliers, etc. These usually go in a bin. Thats where I found the SnapOn Deadblow i bought last month for $3.00- in a bin full of rusty claw hammers and K-Mart rubber mallets. It's easy to pull up power tools (stationary and hand) and put a % of new price on them, so that's where the effort goes.
Perceived value is what this stuff is going to bring. That box of stainless socket head cap screws you paid $50 for is lucky to bring $2 at your estate sale- if it sells at all.

Our Donate|Trash|Keep breakdown was about 39%|60%|1%. I kinda hated to put things back at Goodwill/etc. that seemed likely to wind up in a different hoarder's storage units, but seemed sad to put it all in the landfill.The last three years have been rough. Dad passed unexpectedly about 3 years ago and left me a 40 by 60 pole barn full of mostly worthless hardware he accumulated over a lifetime as a hoarder of every bolt, nut, and screw he ever found. He did have some high quality tools that I kept. Most of the hardware went to the scrappers for a penny to a nickel per pound. My dear mother passed this spring and we had to try to unload a collection of basically useless antiques that she had inherited from her mother and 2 aunts, along with what she collected. Both appraisers we hired said that the market for antique doodads is gone and her TWELVE curio cabinets (very nice ones I might add) of old stuff was basically worthless. It's a shame because she was so proud of her collection. My two nieces and one grandniece have absolutely no interest in antiques. We live in a new age of Gen x, y, and z who don't give a darn about the past. So sad. I will keep a couple of the best curio cabinets to display my flashlight and antique tool collections. I am sure my heirs won't give a damn about them either. New World!
It could be worse, she could sell it for what I said I paid.My wife and I have no children.
My hope would be that she enlists the help of a self-proclaimed tool “expert” who will tell her it is worth 5X what it actually is. After that, she’ll list it online for an outrageous amount only to be ridiculed and offered fair market value by people whom she will presume are trying to rip her off. All of this because she was told differently by some clown who didn’t know ****.
This is exactly what happens whenever someone dies and their spouse attempts to sell their tool collection on Marketplace.