Sacramento’s antique scene runs deeper than most visitors expect. Beyond the downtown grid, tucked into strip malls and converted warehouses, you’ll find multi-dealer operations with 40,000 square feet of inventory and single-owner shops where every piece passed through one person’s hands. The variety matters. A mid-century credenza priced at $400 at one store might sit at $250 two miles away. Knowing where to look saves money and time.
The landscape shifts constantly. Stores close without warning. New dealers take over old spaces.
The information below reflects current operations as of December 2025, with verified addresses, hours, and phone numbers. If you’re driving across town for a specific store, call ahead.
Quick Answer: Sacramento’s top antique stores include 57th Street Antique Mall (45,000 sq ft, 75+ dealers), Antique Trove Roseville (50,000 sq ft, 250 dealers), and Scout Living for mid-century modern. Most open Tuesday through Sunday between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Bring cash for better negotiating leverage. The Sacramento Antique Faire runs the second Sunday of every month under the I-80 overpass.
Sacramento’s evolving art scene and cultural renaissance influence vintage and retro items to be discovered.
Antique stores in Sacramento tend to be more boutique-style, offering a curated experience. You can also find antique fairs and collaborative spaces where multiple dealers come together. Browse through the calendar on the site to find an upcoming show.
Here’s a list of some of the top antique stores in the area.
The Major Antique Malls
These multi-dealer operations offer the widest selection and justify a dedicated trip. Plan for at least an hour at each.
57th Street Antique Mall
875 57th Street, Sacramento, CA 95819
Hours: TuesdayโSunday 10:00 a.m.โ4:30 p.m. (Closed Monday)
Phone: (279) 599-5349
Website: 57thstreetantiquerow.com
Sacramento’s oldest antique mall occupies 45,000 square feet in East Sacramento, between H and J Streets near Sacramento State. Over 75 dealers rotate stock across booths organized by specialty. The furniture section runs heavy on oak and walnut pieces from local estate sales. Glassware fills the center aisles: Pyrex, Depression glass, Fire-King. Pricing reflects dealer knowledge.
Common patterns often run cheaper here than at Antique Trove. Rare pieces command full market value regardless of venue.
The building itself dates back decades, and the layout rewards patience. Booths stack three deep in some sections. Bring a flashlight for the corners. Dogs are welcome, which tells you something about the atmosphere.
Antique Trove Roseville
236 Harding Boulevard, Roseville, CA 95678
Hours: Daily 10:00 a.m.โ6:00 p.m.
Phone: (916) 786-2777
Website: antiquetrove.com/roseville
Northern California’s largest antique mall spreads across 40,000 square feet indoors plus another 10,000 in the outdoor Garden Terrace. The Antique Trove has operated since 1989, and 250 dealers maintain booths here. The scale can overwhelm first-time visitors. Pick a section and work it systematically.
The outdoor village specializes in architectural salvage, iron garden pieces, and weathered furniture that wouldn’t survive inside. Rustic tables, metal sculptures, stoneware planters. Summer heat bakes the outdoor section, so morning visits work best May through September. Indoor climate control keeps the furniture, jewelry, and glassware comfortable year-round.
Prices run higher than 57th Street on comparable pieces, but the selection compensates. If you need a specific style or era, Antique Trove probably has it.
Stardust Vintage Emporium
9580 Micron Avenue, Suite C, Sacramento, CA 95827
Hours: ThursdayโMonday 11:00 a.m.โ7:00 p.m. (Closed TuesdayโWednesday)
Phone: (916) 942-9548
Website: stardustvintageemporium.com
A female and family-run operation supporting 75 local vintage sellers across 13,000 square feet near Sunrise Mall. Stardust leans younger than the traditional antique malls: more vintage clothing, vinyl records, and mid-century modern pieces than Victorian furniture or Depression glass. The store includes a hidden mini theater.
That tells you something about the vibe.
The clothing section dominates the front half. Denim, leather jackets, band tees, and 1970s polyester sorted by era and size. Furniture clusters toward the back, with regular turnover on credenzas, dining sets, and accent pieces. Dogs welcome here too.
Magnolia Antiques & Home Interiors
6468 Fair Oaks Boulevard, Carmichael, CA 95608
Hours: Daily 11:00 a.m.โ6:00 p.m.
Phone: (916) 973-8590
Website: magnoliaantiquesandhomeinteriors.com
A multi-dealer mall in Carmichael with a mix of antiques and home dรฉcor. Art Deco lamps, mid-century kitchenware, and refinished furniture fill the space. Fair Oaks Boulevard winds through the area, so use navigation. The easiest approach: Madison to Manzanita, which becomes Fair Oaks. The store sits in a strip mall on the left.
Magnolia hosts the Marketplace at Magnolia events periodically, which draw additional vendors and crowds. Check their social media for event dates.
Specialty Shops
These smaller operations focus on specific categories or curated selections. Worth visiting if their specialty matches what you’re hunting.
Scout Living
1215 18th Street, Sacramento, CA 95811
Hours: TuesdayโWednesday 11:00 a.m.โ5:00 p.m., ThursdayโSaturday 11:00 a.m.โ7:00 p.m., Sunday 12:00 p.m.โ5:30 p.m. (Closed Monday)
Phone: (916) 594-7971
Website: scoutliving.com
Midtown’s destination for mid-century modern and Danish furniture. Owners Erin Boyle and Stefan Betz Bloom started in San Francisco in 2006 before opening the Sacramento location in 2011.
The curation shows. Every piece fits a cohesive aesthetic: clean lines, teak and walnut, authentic period designs.
Prices reflect the curation and condition. A Danish credenza here costs more than a comparable piece at a multi-dealer mall, but the authentication and restoration quality justify the premium for serious collectors. The shop also features local craft vendors and design accessories.
The Antique Company
2100 X Street, Sacramento, CA 95818
Hours: Daily 10:00 a.m.โ5:30 p.m.
Phone: (916) 457-1099
Website: theantiqueco.com
The bright blue exterior on X Street is impossible to miss. Inside, 7,000 square feet spread across two floors, including a garden area in back. The Antique Company imports European pieces: English, French, and Continental furniture alongside china, stained glass, and decorative lamps.
The teak selection stands out. So does the lighting. For period-appropriate lamps, this is the place to start. Established in the early 2000s, the store has built relationships with European suppliers that smaller dealers can’t match.
Mike & Greg’s
855 57th Street, Suite H, Sacramento, CA 95819
Hours: TuesdayโSunday 10:00 a.m.โ5:00 p.m. (Closed Monday)
Phone: (916) 731-4556
Website: mikeandgregs.com
Located within the 57th Street Antique and Design Center complex, Mike & Greg’s focuses on fine and decorative art, antique jewelry, glassware, and California pottery. They moved to this location in 2010 after years elsewhere in Sacramento.
The jewelry cases deserve attention: estate pieces, signed costume jewelry, and occasional high-end finds.
California pottery collectors should make this a regular stop. Bauer, McCoy, and regional makers appear consistently.
Kicksville Vinyl & Vintage
712 R Street, Unit B, Sacramento, CA 95811
Hours: Daily 12:00 p.m.โ5:30 p.m.
Phone: (916) 822-4884
Website: kicksvilleshop.com
Half record store, half vintage shop. Kicksville relocated to R Street, next to Beers Books downtown. The vinyl selection leans toward rock, soul, and jazz, with careful grading and fair pricing. The vintage side carries furniture, clothing, and collectibles that complement the musical focus: mid-century pieces, 1960s and 1970s dรฉcor, concert ephemera.
If you’re hunting records and vintage in the same trip, this is your stop.
16th Street Mercantile
2414 16th Street, Suite 16, Sacramento, CA 95818
Hours: ThursdayโSunday 10:00 a.m.โ5:00 p.m. (or by appointment)
Phone: (916) 799-9609
Website: 16thstreetmercantile.com
A neighborhood shop in Oak Park mixing antiques, vintage items, and handmade goods from local artisans. The inventory rotates frequently, so repeat visits pay off.
Smaller than the multi-dealer malls but more personal. The kind of place where the owner knows what came in last week and what might interest you.
Parking available in front and behind the building. The ThursdayโSunday schedule means you’ll need to plan around it, but the Oak Park location puts you close to other emerging businesses in the neighborhood.
The Salvage Shed
609 Natoma Street, Folsom, CA 95630
Hours: SaturdayโSunday 11:00 a.m.โ5:00 p.m. (Closed MondayโFriday)
Phone: (916) 385-7498
Weekend-only hours limit accessibility, but the Salvage Shed earns its reputation for architectural salvage and unusual pieces. Hardware, doors, windows, and fixtures pulled from older buildings. The Folsom location sits outside Sacramento proper, about 25 minutes east on Highway 50.
Plan your visit around the weekend schedule. Combine it with Antique Trove in Roseville for a full day of hunting in the eastern suburbs.
Budget-Friendly Options
Antique & Collectibles Marketplace
501 N 10th Street, Sacramento, CA 95811
Hours: TuesdayโSaturday 10:00 a.m.โ3:00 p.m., Sunday 11:00 a.m.โ3:00 p.m. (Closed Monday)
Phone: (916) 446-1122
Sacramento’s largest independent antique store (not a multi-dealer mall, but a single operation) spreads across 6,000 square feet near the Richards Boulevard exit off I-5. Established in 1983, the store relocated to this location in 2001. American, Victorian, English, and French furniture fills the floor, but the doll collection stands out.
The largest selection in the greater Sacramento area, according to the owners.
Prices run lower than the major malls on comparable furniture. The limited hours (closing at 3:00 p.m.) require planning, but the location near downtown makes it easy to combine with other errands.
Schiff’s Estate Sale Building
1309 Del Paso Boulevard, Sacramento, CA 95815
Hours: Daily 11:00 a.m.โ3:00 p.m.
Phone: (916) 923-1443
Website: schiffestateservices.com
Gary Schiff has run estate sales in Sacramento since 1996. The 3,500 square foot building in Old North Sacramento holds overflow from estate liquidations: furniture, collectibles, housewares, and whatever didn’t sell at the weekend sales.
Pricing reflects the estate sale origin. Generally below retail, with room to negotiate.
The inventory changes constantly based on recent estate sales. What you find today won’t be there next week. Check their website for current estate sale schedules if you want first pick before items reach the building.
Monthly Market
Sacramento Antique Faire
21st Street between W and X Streets, Sacramento, CA 95818
Schedule: Second Sunday of every month, 6:30 a.m.โ3:00 p.m.
Phone: (916) 600-9770
Email: [email protected]
Website: sacantiquefaire.com
Three hundred vendors from Northern California and beyond set up under the I-80/Highway 50 freeway overpass once a month. The covered location provides shade even in summer, though July and August still get hot by midmorning.
Furniture, clothing, jewelry, military items, architectural salvage, lighting. The variety matches or exceeds any permanent store.
Arrive early. The serious dealers and collectors show up before 7:00 a.m. with flashlights. By 9:00 a.m., the crowds thicken and the best pieces have moved. Parking fills the surrounding streets; arrive by 6:30 a.m. for spots closest to the market.
The monthly schedule means you can plan around it. Check their website for the exact date each month and any weather cancellations.
Day Trips: Folsom & Auburn
If you’re willing to drive 25โ40 minutes from downtown Sacramento, two historic districts offer concentrated antique shopping worth a half-day trip.
Historic Folsom (Sutter Street)
Folsom’s historic district along Sutter Street survived the COVID closures better than most, and a handful of antique stores remain. The walkable downtown makes it easy to combine shopping with lunch.
Emily’s Antique Corner
732 Sutter Street, Folsom, CA 95630
Hours: Daily 11:00 a.m.โ5:30 p.m. (until 6:00 p.m. FridayโSunday)
Phone: (916) 985-6222
Website: emilysantiques.com
Operating since 1984, Emily’s is one of the last standing antique shops on Sutter Street. The inventory spans Victorian through mid-century: jewelry, paintings, glassware, furniture, and decorative pieces.
Four decades of buying experience. Pricing reflects knowledge without gouging.
Combine with The Salvage Shed (609 Natoma Street, weekends only) if you’re making the Folsom trip.
Old Town Auburn
Thirty minutes northeast of Sacramento on I-80, Auburn’s Old Town district clusters antique stores along Lincoln Way. The area has evolved. New boutiques and restaurants now mix with the antique shops, but several dealers remain.
Street parking is free. The entire district is walkable in an afternoon.
Old Town Auburn Antiques
1586 Lincoln Way, Auburn, CA 95603
Phone: (530) 885-8011
The anchor of Auburn’s antique scene. Vintage lamps, rare books, furniture, and collectibles fill the space. Wheelchair accessible with a parking lot on-site.
Williams Antiques & Collectibles
1582 Lincoln Way, Auburn, CA 95603
Phone: (530) 885-0875
Next door to Old Town Auburn Antiques. The two stores share a block and complement each other’s inventory.
Marquis Etc.
Old Town Auburn
Phone: (530) 889-2633
Website: marquisetc.space
Curated merchandise at reasonable prices with frequent sales. Also maintains an eBay store if you want to preview inventory before driving out.
Auburn hosts a Spring Antiques Street Fair annuallyโworth planning around if you’re serious about the area.
Planning Your Routes
East Sacramento focus: Start at 57th Street Antique Mall, then hit Mike & Greg’s in the same complex. Drive 20 minutes to Antique Trove in Roseville if you have time.
Midtown focus: Scout Living on 18th Street, then Kicksville on R Street, then The Antique Company on X Street. All within a 10-minute walk of each other if you park centrally.
Oak Park addition: 16th Street Mercantile sits between Midtown and Land Park. Easy to add if you’re already in the area Thursday through Sunday.
Full day trip: Morning at the Sacramento Antique Faire (second Sunday only), then Stardust Vintage Emporium in the afternoon, then Antique Trove before they close at 6:00 p.m.
Foothills day trip: Drive to Historic Folsom for Emily’s Antique Corner and The Salvage Shed (weekends), then continue to Old Town Auburn. Three stores on Lincoln Way within walking distance. Budget 4โ5 hours including driving and lunch.
Bring cash. Most stores take cards, but negotiating works better with bills in hand. And call ahead if you’re driving more than 20 minutes. Hours change, and the smaller shops sometimes close unexpectedly.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the largest antique mall in Sacramento?
Antique Trove Roseville is the largest, with 50,000 total square feet (40,000 indoor, 10,000 outdoor) and over 250 dealers. 57th Street Antique Mall is the largest within Sacramento city limits at 45,000 square feet with 75+ dealers.
What day is best to shop antique stores in Sacramento?
Saturdays offer the freshest inventory as many dealers restock Friday night or Saturday morning. Sundays work well for negotiating since stores prefer to sell rather than hold inventory another week. Avoid Mondays when several stores close.
Do Sacramento antique stores accept credit cards?
Most Sacramento antique stores accept credit cards, but cash gives you negotiating leverage. Vendors at multi-dealer malls often offer 5-10% discounts for cash purchases since they avoid processing fees. Bring cash for the best deals.
Where can I find mid-century modern furniture in Sacramento?
Scout Living on 18th Street in Midtown specializes in authenticated mid-century modern and Danish furniture. Stardust Vintage Emporium and 57th Street Antique Mall also carry mid-century pieces, though mixed with other eras.
Are there any antique markets in Sacramento?
The Sacramento Antique Faire runs the second Sunday of every month under the I-80/Highway 50 overpass at 21st Street. Three hundred vendors set up from 6:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Arrive early for the best selection.
Stores That Have Closed
If you’re working from older guides, note these changes:
- Midway Antique Mallย (5130 Madison Ave): Closed permanently in January 2024 after 18 years of operation.
- Lovell’s Antiques Mallย (2114 P Street): Nowย Antiquitรฉ Midtown, an appointment-only gallery and event venue. Not a walk-in antique store anymore.
- About the Author
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Michael Kahn is a long time resident of Sacramento and expert on flea markets and antiques. He has sold at Northern California flea markets for years and bought for even longer. Along with prolific flea market expertise, Michael previously ran an estate liquidation company and several thrift stores.