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Best Vintage Finds at Car Boot Sales (What to Look For)

By Carboot Directory Team Published Guides 3 min read
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Car boot sale stall of vintage finds including patterned Pyrex, a sunburst clock, vinyl records and costume jewellery

The best vintage finds at UK car boot sales are vinyl records, mid-century homeware, vintage Pyrex, old hand tools, costume jewellery, retro gaming and boxed toys — and the way to get them is arriving at opening and checking the maker’s marks before anyone else does.

Every boot field in Britain has a dealer walking it at 6:30am with a torch and a mental price list. This guide is that mental price list — the categories that consistently reward a sharp eye, how to check them in seconds, and the venues where vintage actually turns up.

What to look for, category by category

  • Vinyl records: original pressings beat reissues — check the label and matrix number in the run-out groove. Crates priced “£1 each” are where first pressings hide.
  • Mid-century homeware: teak bowls, sunburst clocks, Scandinavian-look lamps and sideboard smalls. Look for solid wood, original fittings and clean lines.
  • Vintage Pyrex and kitchenware: patterned UK Pyrex, enamel bread bins, Tala measures. Pattern + lid + no chips = the trifecta.
  • Old tools: Record and Stanley planes, Marples chisels, anything cast and stamped rather than moulded. Surface rust cleans; cracks don’t.
  • Costume jewellery: check clasps and weight; signed pieces (Trifari, Monet, Miracle) sit unnoticed in £1 tubs.
  • Retro gaming and toys: consoles with leads, boxed anything, complete board games. Completeness is the whole value.
  • Books and ephemera: first editions with dust jackets, Ladybird and Observer books, old maps and local-history photographs.

The 10-second checks that separate finds from fakes

Hands turning over a vintage ceramic bowl to check the maker's mark on the base at a boot sale
Turn it over first — the base tells you in seconds whether to buy.
  1. Turn it over. Maker’s marks, hallmarks, backstamps and labels live on the underside. No mark doesn’t mean worthless — but a good mark means buy it now.
  2. Feel the weight. Solid brass, cast iron and dense hardwood feel right; modern copies feel light and hollow.
  3. Check completeness. Lids, leads, boxes, all the pieces — half a thing is worth a tenth of a whole thing.
  4. Buy first, research later. At boot prices the downside is a pound or two; the upside is the story you’ll tell for years. Hesitate and it’s gone.

Where vintage actually turns up

Any big Sunday boot can produce a find, but these listed venues lean vintage and antiques — dealers treat several of them as stock sources:

VenueRegionDayWhy collectors go
Alfies Antique MarketGreater LondonSaturdayIndoor — design, vintage fashion, jewellery
Malvern Antique FairWest MidlandsSundayProper antiques fair, £4 entry
Sunbury Antiques MarketSouth East (Kempton Park)SundayLegendary trade hunting ground
Kempton Antique MarketSouth EastTuesdayDealers buy here at dawn — £5 early, free after 8am
Ardingly Antique FairSouth East (W. Sussex)Tuesday–WednesdayOne of the South's biggest fairs
Shepton Mallet Flea MarketSouth West (Somerset)SundayFlea-market mix, strong on vintage
Mid-century furniture and retro homeware stall at a British antiques and vintage market
Indoor antiques markets lean vintage — dealers treat them as stock sources.

Vintage hunting questions, answered

What vintage items are worth money at car boot sales?

Vinyl records, mid-century furniture and lamps, vintage Pyrex and kitchenware, old tools, costume jewellery, retro games consoles and boxed toys are the consistent earners. Condition and completeness drive the value more than age alone.

How do I spot valuable items quickly at a boot sale?

Check the underside first: maker’s marks on ceramics, hallmarks on metalware, labels in clothing, original boxes for toys. Weight is a clue too — solid usually beats hollow. When something feels special, buy first and research at home; it won’t wait.

When is the best time to find vintage at car boot sales?

At opening — dealers clear the obvious vintage within the first hour, which is why many pay early-bird entry. Winter indoor markets are an underrated second window: fewer casual buyers, so good pieces hang around longer.

Serious about first pick? Read the early-bird guide, keep winter mornings free for indoor markets, and check what sells best if you’re on the other side of the table. Then find your next hunting ground on the near-me search.

Written by

Carboot Directory Team

The Carboot Directory team checks and updates every car boot listing on this site — visiting sales, confirming times and prices with organisers, and writing practical guides for UK buyers and sellers.