Target General Merchandise Wholesale Pallet, 200-300 Mixed Items
The Target general merchandise wholesale pallet at the $900 / 200-300 piece tier is Save More’s mid-tier Target GM single-pallet format: cross-category Target inventory, unmanifested, at per-piece cost basis of $3.00-$4.50 per piece. This format sits one tier above the $550 entry-tier Target pallet (PID 3316) and one tier below the $1,500 category-specific Target pallets.
The $900 pricing reflects an inventory format that’s slightly larger and slightly higher quality than the entry-tier $550 pallet. More pieces per pallet on average, broader category mix per pallet, and a marginally higher new-condition share than the entry tier.
What’s in the pallet
- 200-300 individual items per pallet (averages ~250)
- Cross-category mixed inventory from Target’s general merchandise overstock and returns
- Unmanifested. Contents unknown before purchase, not pre-inspected at SKU level
- Categories typically include:
- Home goods. Kitchenware, bedding, decor, small appliances, furniture
- Electronics. Headphones, phone chargers, smart home devices, electronic toys
- Health & beauty. Skincare, hair tools, personal care, vitamins
- Clothing & apparel. Men’s, women’s, kids’, socks, underwear, accessories
- Toys & games. Board games, action figures, puzzles, educational toys
- Seasonal & holiday items. Decorations, outdoor & garden
- Grocery. Non-perishable food items where included
- Pet supplies, cleaning products, hardware. Household essentials
Per-piece economics at the $900 tier
At $900 across 200-300 pieces, per-piece cost basis = $3.00-$4.50 per piece. Resale benchmarks across channels:
- eBay individual listings, $8-$45 per item depending on category
- Amazon Marketplace, $10-$50 per item for sellers with active storefronts
- Facebook Marketplace, $8-$35 per item
- Bin store rotation, $3-$10 per item across the rotation cycle
- Flea market booth, $5-$15 per item at retail pricing
- Local resale storefronts, $5-$22 per item curated retail
Across a typical 250-piece pallet, resale recovery commonly lands $2,000-$4,500 against the $900 cost basis. A 2.2-5× cost recovery range.
Why mid-tier $900 GM works
- Slightly higher condition mix vs the entry-tier $550 pallet. More new and shelf-pull share, slightly less returns share
- Larger piece count, 200-300 items vs the entry-tier ~200 items
- Manageable single-pallet scale. Fits side-hustle, bin-store, and online-resale operations
- Diverse product range reduces unsellable-inventory risk
- Cross-channel resale fit. Bin stores, online marketplaces, flea markets, local retail all work
Important slug + title note
The current URL slug ends in “at-600” but the current pallet price is $900. This is a legacy slug from an earlier $600 pricing tier. Phase 9 implementation should reconcile slug to match current pricing. Recommended: target-general-merchandise-wholesale-pallet.
Who buys a $900 Target GM pallet
- Mid-tier resellers stepping up from entry-tier Target pallets
- Bin store operators running standard $5 day rotation
- Online resellers building Amazon / eBay storefronts
- Side-hustle resellers scaling beyond first-pallet test
- Flea market booth vendors running variety pallets
- Discount retail operators running supplementary inventory
- Local consignment storefronts with general-merchandise sections
Frequently asked questions
How many items are in a pallet?
200-300 individual items per pallet, averaging around 250.
Are the items new or returns?
Mixed: brand-new overstock, shelf pulls, and customer returns. Mostly new and shelf pulls with returns supplementary.
Is there a manifest?
No. Pallets are unmanifested. Contents stay sealed in original Target shipping condition.
What’s the condition mix?
Mixed. Some brand-new overstock, some shelf pulls in retail condition, some customer returns in usable condition.
How does this differ from the entry-tier Target pallet?
The $550 entry-tier Target pallet (PID 3316) has lower per-piece quality mix and is the lowest-cost Target entry point. This $900 pallet has a slightly better condition mix and more pieces per pallet.
What’s the condition disclosure language for invoicing buyers?
“Target general merchandise wholesale pallet, 200-300 mixed Target items across home goods, electronics, health & beauty, apparel, toys, grocery, seasonal, and household categories. Unmanifested. Condition mix of new, shelf pulls, and customer returns. Sold as-is.”
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Condition: All Save More products ship as new, overstock, and clean returns from US retailer distribution channels. Inventory is inspected before pallet assembly; any condition-specific notes are disclosed on the invoice.
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