Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove is the sort of place that makes old-school op shopping feel exciting again. Rather than a small clothing-heavy charity store, this is a proper weekend treasure-hunt destination: a large-format tip shop where all kinds of second-hand goods are rescued from landfill and put back into circulation at bargain prices. Brisbane City Council describes Treasure Troves as thrift stores selling good-quality second-hand items at bargain prices, run by the Endeavour Foundation, with all proceeds going to people with disability.
What gives this shop its edge is sheer variety. Brisbane City Council says Treasure Troves can carry everything from bicycles, books and collectables to kitchenware, household furnishings, sporting equipment, toys, mobility aids, and even large items such as boats and spas. Must Do Brisbane adds that the Acacia Ridge site is packed with furniture, homewares, collectables, books, children’s toys, hardware items and sporting equipment, while another Must Do Brisbane feature calls it a “mammoth shed” with everything from boats and bicycles to bathtubs, furniture, fashion, toys, DVDs and videos.
That broad stock mix makes Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove very different from a fashion-led op shop or a small suburban church thrift store. This is a place for people who enjoy the unpredictability of second-hand shopping: the kind of browse where a person might head in hoping for a bookshelf and come out with a bike, a box of records, a set of kitchenware, and a lamp that somehow seemed too good to leave behind. Council’s own guidance says these stores are especially good for op shoppers, furniture upcyclers and artists who like working with mixed media, which feels about right for a place with this kind of ever-changing stock.
The standout feature here is the “tip shop” energy. Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove is not trying to feel boutique, curated or polished in the modern resale-store sense. Its appeal lies in the hunt. Must Do Brisbane pitches it as a budget-friendly and planet-friendly place where useful household goods and unique items are saved from landfill and resold at a fraction of the price, while Council frames Treasure Troves as a way to reuse and upcycle rather than buy new.
That makes it especially satisfying for shoppers who enjoy the thrill of not knowing what will be there. The official Council page even notes that regular visitors love finding unusual pieces and scoring a bargain, and it specifically recommends arriving early because the most sought-after items sell quickly. That is one of the clearest clues to the shop’s personality: this is a browse-first, act-fast kind of place.
The social side supports that too. Recent Facebook snippets show the store regularly posting fresh stock and weekend reminders, which suggests strong turnover and a browse that changes noticeably from one weekend to the next. The public Facebook summary also describes it simply as a place where recycled household items are sold and where funds go back to Endeavour Foundation Queensland.
Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove is one of the better Brisbane options for shoppers who like variety more than specialisation. The official Council list of sale categories includes bicycles, books, collectables, garden pots, household items, furnishings, kitchenware, large items, mobility aids, records, CDs, DVDs, sporting equipment and toys. Must Do Brisbane adds furniture, homewares, antiques, children’s toys and hardware items to the picture, while its broader weekend trail article highlights fashion as part of the mix as well.
That means the shop works especially well for several types of shopper at once. It is good for home refreshes, practical second-hand buys, upcycling projects, garden and garage finds, hobbyists, prop hunters, and bargain seekers who enjoy rummaging across categories rather than sticking to one department. It is also one of the more appealing places for anyone furnishing a space on a budget, because the range extends well beyond clothes and into larger household and lifestyle items.
Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove is particularly well suited to shoppers who enjoy:
furniture and homeware hunting
upcycling and DIY projects
books, media and collectables
bikes, sporting goods and oddball practical finds
larger-format warehouse-style thrifting
sustainable shopping with a clear reuse focus.
This is a weekends-only shop, and that matters. Brisbane City Council lists Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove as open every Saturday and Sunday from 8am to 4pm, closed on weekdays as well as Easter Sunday, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. Council also explicitly advises shoppers to visit early in the morning because the most sought-after items can sell out quickly. For serious treasure hunters, that early-start advice is worth taking seriously.
The weekend-only schedule also shapes the feel of the visit. This is not a quick after-work errand stop. It is better approached as a dedicated browse, ideally with enough time to walk the aisles properly and inspect bigger items before someone else claims them. The steady stream of “new stock this weekend” Facebook posts reinforces the idea that each weekend can feel a little different.
A quick lap might take 20 to 30 minutes, but that would barely scratch the surface of a store with this sort of variety. For most shoppers, 45 minutes to an hour is a much more realistic window, especially when furniture, bikes, household goods and media are all in play. Shoppers who enjoy a real rummage could easily spend longer. That time estimate fits the “mammoth shed” description from Must Do Brisbane and the sheer breadth of stock described by Council.
A reusable bag is helpful for smaller finds, but Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove rewards shoppers who come prepared for larger possibilities too. Bringing measurements, checking whether the car has room, and bringing a second person for bulky items can all save disappointment. The shop’s Facebook snippets remind customers to inspect items before payment and to bring a friend to help with larger pieces, which is smart practical advice for a place that sells furniture and oversized goods.
It also helps to bring an open mind. Treasure Troves are built around whatever residents have donated through Council’s resource recovery centres, so the best visits often happen when the shopping list is flexible enough to allow for surprise finds. Council’s own description of the range makes that clear: the stock can jump from books and toys to mobility aids, antiques, household basics and unusual one-off items.
One of the most important things to know is that donations do not go directly to the shop. Brisbane City Council says Treasure Troves do not accept donations on site because of limited space. Instead, donations need to be taken to a Council resource recovery centre, where staff assess items for resale and separate them for transfer to the Treasure Troves. Council also notes that donated items can be dropped off free of charge in a vehicle under 4.5 tonnes combined gross vehicle mass.
That system makes Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove a little different from many other op shops. It is a resale outlet for quality goods recovered through Brisbane’s waste and recycling network, not a standard walk-in donation shopfront. Council says this process helps reduce landfill waste and supports charity at the same time, because Treasure Troves are operated by Endeavour Foundation and proceeds support people with disability.
Council says accepted donation categories include artwork, antiques, sculptures, books, clothing, furniture, household items, kitchen utensils, luggage, mobility aids, musical instruments, records, CDs, DVDs, shoes, bags, sporting equipment and toys for ages three and up. The key condition is quality: items need to be clean, usable, undamaged, and in good working condition. Council’s broader donation advice says a useful test is whether the item is good enough to give to a friend.
Council is also very clear about what does not make the cut. Treasure Troves do not accept incomplete, damaged, torn or stained goods, and staff may refuse unusable items. Electrical items are specifically excluded from resale due to safety concerns, and the Council’s donation guide adds that acceptable goods should be free of stains, rips, cracks, chips and missing pieces. In plain terms: this is a place for genuinely reusable goods, not broken leftovers from a clean-out.
Public map listings note customer parking, wheelchair accessibility, air conditioning, and acceptance of credit cards and EFTPOS. Council’s Treasure Trove page also confirms the stores accept cash, EFTPOS and credit cards except American Express. For a big browse with bulky goods in play, customer parking is a genuine plus.
Acacia Ridge Treasure Trove is one of Brisbane’s more rewarding second-hand destinations for shoppers who love variety, value and the thrill of the unexpected. It stands out less for curated style and more for range, reuse and real treasure-hunt energy. For furniture tinkerers, bargain hunters, book browsers, cyclists, collectors, home refreshers and anyone who enjoys the warehouse side of op shopping, this is the sort of place that can easily become a regular weekend stop.
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