You have a crib full of tooling that needs to be gone. Maybe the plant is closing, maybe a program wrapped and the consigned tooling stayed behind, maybe you are downsizing from three machines to one and the holders for the others are just taking up rack space. Whatever moved it to the front of your list, the question is the same: who actually buys a whole tool crib, and how fast can this be over?
We do. Tool Holder Exchange buys used and surplus carbide tooling and CNC tool holders by the lot. You send photos and a rough count, we send a quote, we schedule freight, you get paid. One transaction for the whole crib instead of a hundred eBay listings and a year of waiting.
Get a quote on your tool crib
Send a few photos of the shelves and a rough idea of what is there. We turn quotes around fast and buy the whole lot, mixed and unsorted is fine.
Call (517) 420-5401 or fill out the quote form below.
What tool crib liquidation actually means
Tool crib liquidation is the clearing of a shop’s tooling inventory in a single event rather than piece by piece over time. The crib is the controlled storeroom where a shop keeps its perishable and durable tooling: the carbide, the holders, the collets, the gages, the spares. When the shop changes, the crib has to change with it, and that often means converting a wall of inventory back into cash quickly and cleanly.
This is different from your day-to-day “we have a few extra inserts” cleanup. Liquidation is an event with a deadline behind it. A landlord wants the building empty. A buyer wants the equipment hauled out. A new line is going in next month and the old tooling has to be off the floor first. The defining feature is volume and time pressure, which is exactly the case where selling to a specialist buyer beats every other option.
What we buy
We buy the consumable and durable tooling that fills a crib. The deeper the lot, the better. A pallet of mixed holders and a few totes of carbide is a far easier and more valuable transaction for everyone than a single insert.
- Tool holders of every taper. CAT and BT (the 7/24 steep taper held by a retention knob or pull stud), HSK (the hollow short taper with face contact), NMTB and ISO, plus collet chucks, end mill holders, shell mill arbors, shrink fit, hydraulic, and boring heads.
- Carbide cutting tools. Solid carbide end mills, drills, reamers, and burs, both used and new surplus.
- Indexable tooling and inserts. Turning, milling, and drilling inserts, indexable end mills, face mills, and boring bars. Sealed boxes and loose, named brands and house brands.
- Collets and accessories. ER, TG, DA, and 5C collets, collet nuts, retention knobs and pull studs, set screws, and the small hardware that fills the drawers.
We handle mixed brands and mixed conditions in the same lot. You do not need to sort it, grade it, or know what half of it is. If you want to know how individual categories are valued, see our pages on what we pay to buy used and surplus carbide tooling and on how we price carbide tool holders by taper and condition.
How the process works
Four steps, and most of the work is on our side.
| Step | What happens | What we need from you |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Inventory and photos | You give us a picture of the lot. | Photos of the shelves and totes, plus a rough count or weight. A spreadsheet is great if you have one. You do not need one. |
| 2. Quote | We review type, taper, brand, condition, and quantity, then send a number for the whole lot. | Answer a couple of follow-up questions if we have them. |
| 3. Pickup or freight | We arrange logistics. For a full crib that usually means palletizing and an LTL pickup we schedule. | Access to the dock or the room, and a date that works. |
| 4. Payment | You get paid on the agreed terms once the lot is received and confirmed. | Where to send payment. |
For a closing facility on a clock, the photos-to-pickup path is the fastest way to convert a crib into cash. The step-by-step mechanics, including how to photograph and stage a lot so it quotes accurately, are covered in our guide on how to sell used tooling the right way.
Why a specialist buyer beats the alternatives
When a crib has to go, you usually have four choices. Here is how they actually compare for someone clearing volume on a deadline.
| Option | Speed | What you give up |
|---|---|---|
| Sell to a specialist buyer | Days. One quote, one pickup, one payment. | Nothing meaningful. You trade a small margin for speed and zero labor. |
| List it piecemeal on eBay | Weeks to months, and only if it sells. | Photographing, listing, fielding lowballs, packing, and shipping hundreds of items. The labor usually eats the upside. |
| Send it to auction | Tied to the auction calendar. | Buyer premiums and seller commissions, plus the risk of tooling lots going for scrap money to a single picker. |
| Scrap the carbide | Fast. | The most value. Scrap pays for the tungsten by weight and ignores that a usable holder or a sealed box of inserts is worth far more whole than ground up. |
The core problem with a general auction house or a scrap recycler is that neither one knows what a CAT50 shrink fit holder or a sealed case of grade-matched inserts is actually worth to the next shop. A specialist does, because the next shop is who we sell it to. That is the difference between getting paid for reusable tooling and getting paid for metal by the pound. If your lot is mostly scrap-grade carbide and broken tooling, that has value too, but a full crib almost always has reusable holders and tooling mixed in that deserve more than scrap.
Used versus new value, in plain terms
The reason a used and surplus market exists is simple. Tooling is expensive new, and a holder or a carbide tool that has life left in it is worth real money to a shop that would otherwise pay full retail. As a general market dynamic, used and surplus tooling typically sells well below new pricing, which is exactly why buyers want it and why your crib is worth quoting rather than scrapping. Holders in good condition hold value especially well because the taper geometry does not wear out the way a cutting edge does.
We do not quote from a guess. The number on your lot reflects what the specific brands, tapers, and conditions in front of us will resell for. That is why photos and an honest count matter more than a polished inventory list.
Situations that trigger a tool crib liquidation
- Plant closure or relocation. The building is being emptied and the tooling is not moving with the equipment.
- Machine changeover. A shop moves from CAT to HSK, or sells the machines that used a given taper, and a whole family of holders is suddenly orphaned.
- Program wind-down. A contract or product run ended and the tooling bought for it is now surplus.
- Downsizing or consolidation. Merging two cribs into one, or shrinking the operation, leaves duplicate and excess tooling.
- Estate or business sale. An owner is retiring or selling and the crib needs to be converted to cash before close.
- Annual surplus cleanup. Overbuying and obsolete grades pile up, and the crib reclaims shelf space and budget by clearing them.
If any of these is where you are, the fastest path is a quote. We also buy named-brand lots directly, including a steady appetite for Kennametal tool holders and tooling, and we sell into an active market through our carbide tooling buying program, which is what lets us pay fairly on the whole lot.
Ready to clear the crib?
Send photos and a rough count today. We quote the whole lot, schedule freight, and get you paid. Mixed, unsorted, and any condition is welcome.
Call (517) 420-5401 or fill out the form below for a quote.