Woman claims she makes up to $5,000 a month from dumpster-diving, calls it a ‘real-life treasure hunt’


A Pennsylvania woman has turned dumpster diving into a lucrative business after discovering that authentic designer items are often tossed away. 

Veronica Taylor, 32, of Quakertown, Pennsylvania, teamed up with her friend Liz Wilson, 38, to sell the salvaged items on the auction app WhatNot and on live-streamed auctions.

“It’s really like a real-life treasure hunt,” Taylor told the news agency SWNS. 

“It’s fantastic.” 

Taylor began dumpster diving with Wilson in June 2022.

Initially, Taylor said it was “just a hobby,” finding the unusual activity to be “so much fun.”

By February 2023, it was her full-time gig, she said. 

Among Taylor’s finds: a Louis Vuitton wallet and designer shoes, she told the news agency.

She donates most food and hygiene products to charity, she said. 

“You have no idea what you’re going to find,” she told SWNS. “And I can hang out with my best friend and make a living from finding things.” 

Taylor splits the sales with Wilson and claimed to be making a full-time income from dumpster diving.

“I want to say we’ve been getting $4,000 to $5,000 a month,” she told SWNS about the women’s work. “It’s definitely not worth working a real job for.” 

Dumpster diving, Taylor said, “gives you so much freedom.” 

Taylor and Wilson now travel from city to city, exploring dumpsters in “rich-people neighborhoods” and at thrift shops, they said.

Veronica Taylor calls her dumpster diving gig a “real-life treasure hunt.”
SWNS
Veronica Taylor said she's been getting $4,000 to $5,000 a month.
Veronica Taylor said she’s been getting $4,000 to $5,000 a month by dumpster diving.
SWNS

“We find Louis Vuitton, Michael Kors,” said Taylor. “That’s in thrift stores. We thought, ‘There’s no way this was in the dumpster.’” 

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Taylor and Wilson said they “assume it’s older people working in the stores who don’t know much about the brands and throw them out.”

She continued, “It really is like being on vacation all the time. The typical places that we do really well at we go [to] every single night — 10 p.m. to 3 a.m., usually.”


Liz Wilson, the friend, and Taylor sell the salvaged items on an auction app called WhatNot and on live-streamed auctions.
Liz Wilson, the friend, and Taylor sell the salvaged items on an auction app called WhatNot and on live-streamed auctions.
SWNS

During live-streamed auctions, customers bid on items as they are discovered, SWNS said. 

The money made is “100% profit,” noted Taylor. “We pretty much take any offer.” 

“We also give a lot away, too, and that’s why our supporters keep coming back. They know we hook them up,” she said. 

“Another reason why auctions are so enticing [is] because every item starts at a dollar,” said Taylor.



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