Government Auctions Near Me: Find Local Surplus & Seized Property
Government auctions happen in every U.S. state - federal agencies, state DOTs, county sheriffs, and city fleets all sell surplus and seized property to the public. Because items must be picked up locally, the closest auctions to you are often the best deals.
Search all 32,957 government auctions near you
Filter local surplus and seized property by distance

2020 Ford Edge
Greer, SC · 121 bids
(NH) 2019 Yamaha AR240 w/ Trailer
NH · 101 bids

2019 Dodge Charger
Chehalis, WA · 96 bids

(1) Silver GMT-Master ll Rolex Known as “Batgirl” Men’s Watch
Jacksonville, FL · 95 bids

Scrap brass fittings - Water
Canton, OH · 94 bids

2011 Ford F-350 SD 4WD (Low Miles, engine and idle hours)
Ashland, VA · 94 bids

206 E. Lubeck Hills, Washington, WV 26181
Parkersburg, WV · 92 bids

2018 Chevrolet Tahoe LS 2WD
Camden, SC · 89 bids

Custom 14k Yellow Gold &14K White Gold Pendant including 10k Gold Rope Chain weighing 113.2 grams
Jacksonville, FL · 84 bids

2008 CATERPILLAR 416E BACKHOE
Suffolk, VA · 81 bids

2021 Ford Explorer
Saint Charles, MO · 80 bids

(1) 14K Yellow Gold Diamond Pendant w/10K Yellow Gold Cuban Link Chain Weighing 104.0 Grams
Jacksonville, FL · 78 bids
32957 active government auctions nationwide right now.Last updated: 2026-07-17
There is no single national auction house - surplus is sold by thousands of separate agencies, each picking its own platform. That is why "near me" searches are tricky: a listing in your city might be on GovDeals while the next one over is on PublicSurplus or GSA. We pull every platform into one feed so you can enter your ZIP, set a radius, and see only the auctions you can realistically drive to and pick up from.
Browse Auctions by State
Pick your state to jump straight to surplus and seized-property listings from agencies near you.
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Frequently Asked Questions
- How do I find government auctions near me?
- Open the feed and enter your ZIP code, then set a distance radius - 25, 50, or 100 miles. The feed pulls listings from federal (GSA, HUD), state, county, and city sellers and sorts them by how close the pickup location is to you. Because surplus is rarely shipped, filtering by distance is the fastest way to surface auctions you can actually win and collect.
- Are there local government auctions in every state?
- Yes. Every state runs surplus auctions through its DOT, general services agency, or a platform like PublicSurplus or GovDeals, and most counties and cities auction retired fleet vehicles and equipment locally. Federal GSA and HUD auctions also list items in regional holding lots nationwide, so there are bidding opportunities near nearly every populated area.
- Can I pick up items locally?
- Almost always - and usually you have to. Most government auctions are pickup-only, with a deadline of 5 to 10 business days after you win. Each listing shows the pickup city, state, and any deadline, so you can confirm the location is reachable before you bid. A handful of small items on PropertyRoom ship, but vehicles and equipment never do.
- Do I have to travel to bid?
- No. Bidding is fully online for nearly all government auctions - you register on the platform and place bids from anywhere. The only in-person step is pickup after you win, which is why filtering by distance to your ZIP matters. Always check the pickup location first so you're not bidding on something three states away.