The 10 Best Flea Markets in Nevada
The 10 Best Flea Markets in Nevada

The 10 Best Flea Markets in Nevada

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A Rat Pack-era casino poster. A hand-stitched showgirl costume. A piece of silverware stamped with a mining company mark from the 1880s. The best flea markets in Nevada turn up things you won’t find anywhere else — because Nevada’s history doesn’t look like anywhere else.

The state’s antique scene stretches well beyond the Las Vegas Strip. South Main Street alone holds several distinct shops within a few blocks of each other. Drive north and you’re in Reno, where Junkee has been running since 2008. Head further into the high desert and you’ll reach Genoa — Nevada’s oldest town — where a stone-and-wood emporium holds decades of Western bric-a-brac in organised chaos.

Below are eight flea markets, antique malls and vintage shops spread across Nevada — from Las Vegas and Boulder City to Reno, Gardnerville and beyond. Whether you’re hunting casino collectibles, mid-century furniture or frontier-era hardware, there’s genuine depth here.

Antique Mall of America – Las Vegas, Nevada

The building is hard to miss — patriotic imagery plastered across the exterior, tucked along Las Vegas Boulevard away from the resort corridor. Inside, the scale surprises: more than 30,000 square feet of floor space, over 70 dealers, and a collection that sprawls from old-world European antiques to American memorabilia, art, collectibles and vintage furnishings. It’s the kind of place where a single pass through every booth takes longer than you expect. Shoppers travel from across the country for it, and the density of stock rewards the patient browser over the casual glance. If Las Vegas is on your itinerary for any reason, this is a worthwhile detour before or after the casino floor.

📍 Address: 9151 S Las Vegas Blvd, Suite 344, Las Vegas, NV 89123
📅 Days: Monday–Sunday
🕐 Hours: 10:00 am–6:00 pm daily
💰 Admission: Free
🌐 Website: antiquemallofamerica.net

Antique Alley Mall – Las Vegas, Nevada

A few miles from Antique Mall of America, Antique Alley Mall occupies its own niche in the Las Vegas antiquing circuit. Where the former leans toward European and Americana collectibles, Antique Alley draws a loyal crowd with a tighter, more curated feel — dealers here tend to specialise, which makes it easier to zero in on a particular era or category without wading through unrelated stock. Casino memorabilia surfaces reliably, alongside vintage Nevada ephemera that reflects the city’s particular brand of mid-century glamour.

It’s the kind of multi-dealer setup where return visits pay off; inventory turns over as dealers refresh their booths, and regulars know to check back after a few weeks rather than writing off a category after one look. For visitors combining multiple Las Vegas antique stops in a single day, Antique Alley pairs well with the other shops along the South Main Street corridor — the proximity makes the logistics straightforward.

📍 Address: 1126 S Main St, Las Vegas, NV 89104
📅 Days: Monday–Sunday
🕐 Hours: 10:00 am–6:00 pm daily
💰 Admission: Free
🌐 Website: Not specified in source — verify before publishing

Junkee Clothing Exchange & Antique – Reno, Nevada

Reno’s vintage scene has a distinct anchor in Junkee, which has been operating since 2008 and built a reputation that extends well beyond the city. The shop blends clothing exchange with antiques and collectibles under one roof — an unusual combination that means you might leave with a 1970s denim jacket in one hand and a piece of mid-century barware in the other. The clothing side skews heavily vintage rather than generic secondhand, with an eye toward wearable finds rather than costume-bin leftovers.

What sets Junkee apart from the Las Vegas stops further south is the atmosphere. It reads more like an independent record shop than a formal antique mall — browsable, a little unpredictable, and genuinely curated by people who care about the stock. For collectors making a Nevada road trip rather than a straight Las Vegas run, Reno adds real variety to the itinerary, and Junkee is the natural first stop once you arrive.

📍 Address: 299 E Plumb Ln, Suite 135A, Reno, NV 89502 (Reno Public Market)
📅 Days: Monday–Sunday
🕐 Hours: 11:00 am–7:00 pm daily
💰 Admission: Free
🌐 Website: junkeeclothingexchange.com

Charleston Antique Mall – Las Vegas, Nevada

While the South Main Street corridor gets most of the attention from Las Vegas antique hunters, Charleston Antique Mall draws a steady local following on its own terms. The shop sits within reach of the Strip but operates at a pace that feels closer to a neighbourhood institution than a tourist-facing showroom — regulars browse alongside out-of-towners, and the mix of dealers reflects that dual audience.

Stock here leans toward the kind of domestic accumulation that defines a good multi-dealer antique mall: vintage housewares, decorative objects, period furniture and the occasional piece of Nevada-specific memorabilia that collectors travel for specifically. It’s worth visiting as a complement to the larger malls nearby rather than a substitute — each shop along the Las Vegas circuit has a distinct character, and Charleston adds useful variety to a day already built around antiquing.

📍 Address: 560 S Decatur Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89107
📅 Days: Monday–Sunday
🕐 Hours: 10:00 am–6:00 pm daily
💰 Admission: Free
🌐 Website: charlestonantiquemall.com

Paradise Valley Antique Mall – Las Vegas, Nevada

Paradise Valley Antique Mall offers a different entry point into the Las Vegas antique circuit — one that tends to attract collectors who’ve already worked through the better-known shops and want something with a more residential, neighbourhood feel. The mall draws from a mix of dealers whose inventory reflects the broader Las Vegas basin rather than a curated Strip-adjacent identity, which means the stock can be genuinely unpredictable in the best sense: vintage jewellery next to mid-century furniture next to casino-era ephemera that surfaces without warning.

For visitors building a multi-stop antique day across Las Vegas, Paradise Valley rounds out the circuit in a way that avoids repetition — the character here is distinct enough from the South Main Street corridor that it earns the extra drive rather than just duplicating what you’ve already seen. Dealers refresh stock with enough regularity that return visitors tend to find something new, which keeps the local following engaged between tourist waves.

📍 Address: 3355 E Russell Rd, Suite 2A, Las Vegas, NV 89120
📅 Days: Monday–Saturday / Sunday
🕐 Hours: Mon–Sat 10:00 am–6:00 pm; Sun 10:00 am–5:00 pm
💰 Admission: Free
🌐 Website: shopparadisemall.com

Sherman’s House of Antiques – Boulder City, Nevada

Boulder City sits about 25 miles southeast of Las Vegas, a small planned town built to house workers during the construction of Hoover Dam — and it has never quite shaken that sense of deliberate, unhurried purpose. Sherman’s House of Antiques fits that character well. The shop occupies a setting that feels removed from the Las Vegas antique circuit in more than just geography; the pace is slower, the inventory more eclectic, and the overall effect is closer to a proper emporium than a multi-dealer mall.

Boulder City’s proximity to the dam and its Depression-era founding gives the local antique scene a specific historical texture that’s worth seeking out. Hardware, promotional materials, period housewares and desert Southwest objects surface here in ways they simply don’t in Las Vegas showrooms. For collectors making the drive out toward Lake Mead or crossing into Arizona, Sherman’s is a natural and rewarding stop — the kind of shop that justifies pulling off the highway rather than treating Boulder City as a pass-through.

📍 Address: 1228 Arizona St, Boulder City, NV 89005
📅 Days: Monday–Sunday
🕐 Hours: 10:00 am–6:00 pm daily (Yelp lists 10:00 am–5:45 pm — verify before publishing)
💰 Admission: Free
🌐 Website: shermanshouseofantiques.com

Eddy Street Vintage Market – Gardnerville, Nevada

Gardnerville sits in the Carson Valley, roughly an hour south of Reno and a world away from the Las Vegas antique circuit. Eddy Street Vintage Market brings a different kind of shopping to this part of Nevada — less the sprawling multi-dealer mall and more the focused vintage shop that rewards browsers who slow down. The inventory tends toward clothing, accessories and decorative objects with genuine age, drawing collectors who are less interested in quantity and more in finding something specific and well-sourced.

The Carson Valley setting matters here. Gardnerville has ranching and agricultural roots that give the local antique and vintage scene a flavour distinct from both Reno’s urban thrift culture and Las Vegas’s casino-inflected memorabilia trade. Objects that pass through this part of Nevada often carry that high-desert, working-West provenance — which makes Eddy Street a natural stop for collectors making the scenic drive between Reno and Lake Tahoe, or anyone heading further south toward the historic settlements along the state line.

📍 Address: 1235 Eddy St, Gardnerville, NV 89410
📅 Days: Third weekend of every month only (Friday–Sunday)
🕐 Hours: Fri–Sat 10:00 am–5:00 pm; Sun 10:00 am–4:00 pm
💰 Admission: Free
🌐 Website: eddystreetvintagemarket.com
📖 More info: Check website or Facebook/Instagram for monthly pop-up dates before visiting

Antiques Plus – Genoa, Nevada

Genoa holds the distinction of being Nevada’s oldest permanent settlement, and Antique Plus (formerly the Genoa Antique Store) fits that pedigree without straining for effect. The shop carries the kind of layered, unhurried inventory that accumulates when a place has been absorbing the region’s castoffs for decades — Western hardware, frontier-era domestic objects, mining-adjacent curiosities and the sort of decorative odds and ends that don’t easily fit any single category but feel immediately at home in a town this old.

The setting alone separates Genoa from every other stop on a Nevada antique itinerary. Tucked against the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada, the town operates at a pace that has nothing to do with casino tourism or urban thrift culture. For collectors who have already worked through the Las Vegas South Main Street corridor or the Reno shops, the drive to Genoa adds genuine variety — the provenance here runs toward ranching, early settlement and mountain-pass history rather than showroom glamour. It’s a fitting final stop on any serious Nevada antiquing circuit.

Nevada’s antiquing geography rewards the traveler who is willing to look beyond the Strip. The Las Vegas South Main Street corridor alone offers enough density for a full day of serious browsing, while Reno, Boulder City, and the Carson Valley towns each bring their own character — high-desert provenance, frontier hardware, showroom glam, or quiet mountain-settlement history. Whether you’re hunting casino-era memorabilia in Las Vegas or early Western domestic objects in Genoa, the state has a richer second-hand culture than its reputation for spectacle might suggest.

📍 Address: 2242 Main St, Genoa, NV 89411
📅 Days: Monday–Sunday
🕐 Hours: 10:00 am–5:00 pm daily
💰 Admission: Free

Planning Your Nevada Antique Trip

The Las Vegas entries on this list cluster conveniently: Antique Mall of America sits further south on Las Vegas Boulevard, while Antique Alley Mall and Charleston Antique Mall anchor the South Main Street corridor within easy walking or driving distance of each other. If your time is limited, that corridor alone justifies a dedicated half-day. Build a full weekend itinerary by pairing Las Vegas with a day trip to Boulder City — Sherman’s House of Antiques is only about 25 miles southeast — or save the northern stretch for a separate Reno-based trip that includes Junkee and a scenic detour through Gardnerville and Genoa.

Seasonal and weather considerations matter more in the northern part of the state. The Carson Valley markets and mountain-adjacent shops can have reduced hours or limited access in winter months, so it pays to check ahead before making the drive. Wherever you go, bring cash as a backup — multi-vendor malls typically offer central card checkout, but individual booth dealers often prefer it, and some smaller shops outside Las Vegas and Reno may not process cards at all.

Book Your Stay

Las Vegas has the widest range of accommodation options for any antiquing base, from budget motels near the South Main Street corridor to resort hotels on the Strip. For the northern circuit, Reno is the practical hub — central to Junkee, within a comfortable drive of Gardnerville, and less than an hour from Genoa. Boulder City offers smaller, quieter lodging if you prefer to stay close to Sherman’s and explore Lake Mead country at the same time. Use the map below to find options near any of the markets on this list.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are Nevada’s antique malls open year-round?

Most of the Las Vegas and Reno venues on this list operate year-round, but hours can shift seasonally — particularly for smaller shops and any outdoor or periodic markets in the northern part of the state. Always check directly with a venue before visiting, especially in winter or around public holidays.

What kinds of items are Nevada flea markets and antique shops known for?

The variety is genuinely wide. Las Vegas venues tend to have strong selections of mid-century furniture, Hollywood Regency pieces, casino-era collectibles, and showroom memorabilia. Reno shops like Junkee add vintage clothing and costume-ready finds to the mix. Further south and east — Boulder City, Gardnerville, Genoa — the inventory shifts toward Western hardware, ranching antiques, frontier-era domestic objects, and mining-adjacent curiosities.

Do Nevada antique malls accept credit cards?

Most multi-vendor malls process cards at a central checkout, but individual dealers within a mall frequently prefer cash — and cash buyers sometimes negotiate better prices. ATMs are widely available in Las Vegas venues. For shops outside the major cities, it’s worth bringing enough cash to cover purchases just in case.

Is the drive between Las Vegas and Genoa practical as a single trip?

It’s a long day but a scenic one — roughly four to five hours of driving each way depending on stops. Most visitors split it across two or three days, using Reno as a northern base and Las Vegas as the southern anchor. The stretch through Gardnerville and Genoa pairs naturally with a Reno visit, and the drive itself passes through some of Nevada’s most historically layered landscape.

What is the best area in Las Vegas for antique shopping?

The South Main Street Arts District is the most concentrated area, with Antique Alley Mall and Charleston Antique Mall both accessible from that corridor. Antique Mall of America is further south on Las Vegas Boulevard and worth the separate trip given its size. If you’re planning a dedicated antique day in the city, the Arts District is the logical starting point.

Are these markets suitable for first-time antique shoppers?

Absolutely. Multi-vendor malls like Antique Mall of America, Antique Alley Mall, and Paradise Valley Antique Mall are easy to navigate with clearly organized booth areas and staff on hand. Junkee in Reno has a particularly welcoming, creative atmosphere that suits browsers of all experience levels. Smaller shops like Sherman’s and the Genoa Antique Store reward slower, more exploratory visits — no expertise required, just curiosity.