Neighbor-to-neighbor free stuff
Free Stuff,
Zero Drama
The smart way to give away and find free items in your neighborhood. When someone ghosts, CurbDrop automatically fills the slot — so nothing sits on the curb.
Post. Claim. Pickup. Done.
Post an item
Snap a photo, drop a pin, set a window. Listing takes under a minute. No forms to fumble with.
Queue forms
Neighbors request to claim. You're in charge — accept whoever feels right, or let the queue run itself.
Pickup happens
Confirmed time, confirmed neighbor. If they flake, the next person in line gets bumped up automatically.
Both sides rate
Reliability scores build over time. Good neighbors get priority. Chronic no-shows get deprioritized. Community shapes itself.
Every year, millions of perfectly good items end up in landfills. Not because nobody wanted them — but because the handoff was too painful to coordinate.
People list things for free. Neighbors express interest. Then nobody shows up. Or the listing gets lost in a sea of marketplace noise. Or the whole thing just feels like too much effort for something that's free.
CurbDrop exists to make giving away stuff feel as easy as putting it on the curb — and to make finding free stuff feel like a real community moment, not a scavenger hunt.
Built for real neighborhood life
Smart Claim Queue
When a claimant ghosts, AI instantly promotes the next person. No chasing, no relisting, no dead ends.
Weather-Smart Windows
We suggest pickup windows based on weather and both parties' availability. Rain check the couch — nobody wants that.
Trust Scores
Everyone gets a pickup reliability score. Show up, build reputation, get priority access to the best stuff first.
Map-Native Browse
See every free item on a map, filtered by radius and category. Walk the neighborhood, spot the free section.
Every curb a little free store.
Every neighbor a little more connected.
Stuff flows through communities all the time — it just needs a path. CurbDrop builds that path. When it works, it's not just about the couch or the bookshelf. It's about knowing who your neighbors are. It's about the planet, one less trip to the landfill. It's about the kind of small, daily magic that makes a neighborhood actually feel like one.