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How to Find Penny Items at Home Depot

A Home Depot penny item is a clearance product that has cascaded all the way down to $0.01 in Home Depot's system. That penny price isn't a promotion — it's the store's internal code to pull the item off the floor and liquidate it, so it's a genuine gray area: some stores will sell it, many won't. The only way to know an item's real price is to scan its UPC barcode in store. (Heads up: Penny Tree tracks Dollar Tree and Family Dollar live — Home Depot isn't in our database, so this is a how-to, not a list.)

By · Last updated 2026-06-26.

What a Home Depot "penny item" really is

When a product is discontinued or stops selling, Home Depot marks it down in stages. If it still hasn't sold at the final clearance price, the system drops it to $0.01 — a flag telling employees to remove it from inventory. So a penny item is "clearance that should have been pulled but wasn't." It's real, but unofficial: there's no Home Depot penny list, and a store can decline the sale.

Bottom line: treat penny finds as a lucky bonus, not a plan. Most trips end with no pennies — the realistic win is catching items at 50–75% off before they vanish.

Reading the clearance tags (and the price-ending myth)

Clearance items get a yellow price tag. You'll see endings like .06, .04, .03, or .02, and many guides claim these encode exactly how many weeks are left. In practice that "stage code" theory is shaky — the endings are mostly markdown math and vary by region. The one ending that reliably means something is .01: a true penny / "pull it" price.

Where (and when) penny items hide

Some departments cycle through clearance far more than others:

Markdowns often process early in the week and first thing in the morning, but it varies by store — there's no company-wide "penny day."

Confirming it at the register — and the etiquette

Scan the item at self-checkout to see the real price. A few honest cautions:

Is there a Home Depot penny app or list?

No official one. Home Depot's app is useful for narrowing candidates — it shows the current price, the bay/aisle location, and how many units a store has — but it doesn't reliably show penny prices, which are realized at the register. Third-party sites and Facebook/Discord groups crowd-source finds, with the usual reliability caveats. For a live penny list, that exists for dollar stores: see our Dollar Tree penny guide and which dollar store sells pennies.

FAQ

Are Home Depot penny items real?

Yes. Discontinued clearance items that don't sell get marked to $0.01 in Home Depot's system — a signal to pull them from the floor. They're real but unofficial and inconsistent: there's no penny list, and stores may refuse the sale.

What do the price endings (.06, .03) mean at Home Depot?

A yellow tag means clearance. Endings like .06/.03 are widely claimed to encode markdown stage or weeks remaining, but that theory is unreliable and varies by store. The only ending that reliably means "penny / pull it" is .01. Always scan the UPC to confirm the real price.

Do Home Depot employees have to sell you a penny item?

No. A $0.01 price often means the item was supposed to be removed, so stores can decline. Some tools also have vendor buy-back locks that block the sale. If it goes through, great; if not, be polite and move on.

Where are penny items usually found at Home Depot?

The garden center is the top spot, followed by seasonal/holiday decor after a season ends, mis-tinted paint, and clearance endcaps. Inventory varies by store, so scan anything that looks discontinued or out of season.

Does Penny Tree track Home Depot penny items?

No — Penny Tree tracks Dollar Tree and Family Dollar prices live. This Home Depot guide is a how-to. For a live $0.01 list, use our Dollar Tree penny items page.

Browse the live penny database →

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