| Everyday, hundreds of thousands of valuable items, | | | | replacing equipment with the newest technology, or |
| including houses, cars, trucks, yachts, airplanes, | | | | repossessions, or seizures, abandoned property, or |
| jewelry, electronics, furniture, and much more, are | | | | foreclosures. Regardless of the reason the |
| attained by the government. The government gets | | | | government has to get rid of these items, and they |
| these items for a variety of reasons including | | | | do this by selling the items at incredibly low prices |
| repossessions, seizures, abandoned property, surplus, | | | | through government surplus auctions. |
| and foreclosures. Due to the large number of items | | | | The government is consistently holding these surplus |
| that the government accumulates over a short | | | | auctions everyday of the year, all over the United |
| period of time, it would cost to much to store all of | | | | States and online. Giving you the opportunity to gain |
| the items. So instead of storing the items the | | | | incredible savings on everything that the government |
| government auctions them off through various public | | | | no longer needs. There are thousands of new surplus |
| auctions. | | | | items added every single week for auction, among |
| One of the largest venues of public government | | | | over five hundred different categories of |
| auctions is a surplus auction. A government surplus | | | | commodities. Surplus auctions are open to everyone |
| auction is the result of the government getting rid of | | | | and have no restrictions on who can purchase. Due |
| its unneeded property. The government can have a | | | | to this there can be a lot of people who participate in |
| surplus for a several reasons, including having | | | | these auctions, and the person who bids the most |
| purchased an excess amount of something, or | | | | takes the item home. |