One of the most common confusions in Albuquerque book donation: Savers looks like a charity thrift store, but is structurally for-profit. Savers’ own posted disclosure says it directly: “I am a for-profit company that champions reuse. Shopping in my stores doesn’t support any nonprofit, but donating your reusable goods does. I pay nonprofits for your stuff.” NMLP is also for-profit. That structural similarity is where the comparison gets interesting — both are for-profits that accept donations, and they have completely different models.
Disclosure: I run NMLP. Savers is operated by TVI, Inc. dba Savers Value Village, a for-profit thrift chain with three Albuquerque locations. TVI is registered as a professional fundraiser where required, and a partner nonprofit is paid per pound for donations. This page tries to identify which donor situation favors which channel rather than to recommend one over the other in all cases. Both are legitimate. They serve different donor needs.
Two for-profits, two very different models
Savers (TVI, Inc. dba Savers Value Village)
Three Albuquerque metro locations:
- Midtown/University — 2620 Carlisle Blvd NE, Albuquerque, NM 87110, (505) 888-0116
- North Valley — 1551 Mercantile Ave NE, Suite E, Albuquerque, NM 87107, (505) 273-2269
- West Side — near 3400 Calle Cuervo NW, (505) 890-2680
Donation model: drop-off only at the back of any store during business hours (typically 9 AM–8 PM). The for-profit chain pays a partner nonprofit per pound of donated goods. Books are accepted as a secondary inventory category alongside clothing and household goods. Standard thrift-store condition rules apply at intake. No tax-deductible receipt from Savers itself (Savers is for-profit). If a donor wants the deduction, they need separate documentation from the partner nonprofit.
New Mexico Literacy Project
One warehouse at 5445 Edith Blvd NE, Unit A, Albuquerque, NM 87107. Free 24/7 outdoor drop bin. Free home pickup by appointment, anywhere in metro Albuquerque and surrounding NM communities. No condition rules — water-damaged, ex-library, textbooks, encyclopedias, marked-up copies, unsorted bulk all accepted. Books-and-media-only intake (no clothing, no housewares). Readable books are hand-sorted and routed to direct buyers via Amazon and eBay (revenue funds the operation), to APS Title I classroom libraries, UNM Children’s Hospital pediatric reading carts, and Little Free Libraries. Unsalvageable books go to a regional commercial paper recycler. Donations are not tax-deductible because NMLP is a for-profit New Mexico business.
The comparison table
| Factor | Savers | NMLP |
|---|---|---|
| Tax status | For-profit (TVI, Inc.) | For-profit NM business |
| Tax-deductible | No (partner nonprofit may issue separate documentation) | No |
| Free home pickup | No | Yes (operator loads) |
| Drop-off hours | Business hours, ~9 AM–8 PM (varies by store) | 24/7 outdoor bin |
| ABQ locations | 3 (Carlisle, Mercantile, west side) | 1 warehouse + metro pickup |
| Water/mold damage | Rejected | Accepted |
| Ex-library copies | Generally rejected | Accepted |
| Textbooks > 5 yrs | Generally rejected | Accepted |
| Encyclopedias / Reader’s Digest | Generally rejected | Accepted |
| Magazines / periodicals | Generally rejected | Accepted |
| CDs / DVDs / audiobooks | Yes (sellable condition) | Yes (any condition) |
| Vinyl records | Sometimes | Yes |
| Clothes / housewares | Yes (primary inventory) | No |
| Pre-sorting required | Yes (donor pre-sorts by category) | No |
| Where books go | Thrift shelf at pennies–a few dollars; unsold routes to outlet, partner-charity pickup, or pulping | Hand-sort: direct buyers (Amazon/eBay) + APS Title I + UNMCH + LFLs + paper recycling |
| Who benefits | For-profit revenue + per-pound payment to partner nonprofit | Books-to-readers programs; metro recycling stream |
Which donor situation favors which channel?
Savers is the right call when:
- You’re also dropping off clothes, shoes, housewares, kitchen items, or general thrift inventory and the books are part of a mixed batch
- You believe in supporting the per-pound payment model that funds Savers’ partner nonprofit
- Your books are clean, current, hardcover and trade-paperback, in mainstream categories (fiction, nonfiction, children’s, cookbooks)
- You live near 2620 Carlisle NE, 1551 Mercantile NE, or the Calle Cuervo NW west side store, and a quick weekday drop-off works for your schedule
- You have one or two boxes you can drop in your trunk and bring to the back of the store
NMLP is the right call when:
- Your books include the categories Savers rejects (water-damaged, ex-library, textbooks, encyclopedias, magazines, marked-up, bulk-unsorted)
- You can’t load and drive — estate cleanout, downsizing, mobility constraint, out-of-state coordinator handling a parent’s home — NMLP brings the truck and the muscle
- You need after-hours availability — Savers closes; NMLP’s 24/7 outdoor drop bin is always open
- You have unsorted bulk and don’t want to pre-sort by condition or category
- You want the books to route to local Albuquerque schools, hospitals, and Little Free Libraries specifically, rather than to thrift-shelf-rotation that may pulp unsold inventory
- You’re donating only books and media (not clothes or housewares) and want a channel built for that mix
The hybrid play
Most Albuquerque cleanouts are mixed: clothes, kitchen items, and books all at once. Best path:
- Pre-sort by category. Pull the clothes, the housewares, and the current/clean books into a “Savers stack.” Pull the damaged, ex-library, textbook, encyclopedia, magazine, and bulk-unsorted books into an “NMLP stack.”
- Drop the Savers stack at the closest of the three ABQ locations during business hours. Mixed-category donations are welcome.
- Call NMLP for the book bulk. 702-496-4214. I pick up the boxes Savers won’t take. No sorting, no condition rules, I load.
- Result. Savers absorbs the thrift-shelf-ready inventory. The bulk and the rejects get hand-sorted and routed to local readers. Nothing in the landfill.
The honest critique of NMLP
Things Savers does that NMLP doesn’t and probably never will:
- Multi-category intake. Savers takes clothing, shoes, housewares, kitchen items, books, and small furniture in one trip. NMLP is books-and-media-only.
- Multi-location coverage. Savers has three Albuquerque stores spread across Midtown, North Valley, and the West Side. NMLP has one warehouse on Edith. For a donor in Rio Rancho or the Westgate area, the drive to a Savers is shorter than the drive to NMLP’s drop bin.
- Staffed intake during business hours. Savers has employees at the back of the store who help unload the car and provide an immediate handoff. NMLP’s drop bin is unstaffed (the donor pulls up and drops). Pickup is by appointment with one operator.
- Per-pound payment to a partner nonprofit. Savers’ model genuinely funds a partner nonprofit via the per-pound payment. NMLP doesn’t have an equivalent third-party-funding arrangement; revenue goes to operating costs and the books-to-readers programs.
What NMLP genuinely adds
Two things Savers is structurally not built to do, that NMLP exists to do:
- Take what they can’t. The water-damaged garage finds, the 1973 encyclopedia set, the ex-library copies, the old textbooks from a grown child’s college years, the magazines, the unsorted bulk. Everything the back-of-Savers turns away — NMLP takes. None of it lands in the landfill.
- Handle the physical work. Savers requires the donor to load, drive, and unload. For a working donor with an estate to clean out, that’s the friction that ends the project. NMLP’s free pickup at 702-496-4214 removes the friction.
Sources and verification
- Savers corporate disclosure (“I am a for-profit company...”): savers.com
- Savers Albuquerque store directory: stores.savers.com
- Savers Carlisle NE location reviews: Yelp (3.4★, 55 reviews)
- NMLP location and policies: newmexicoliteracyproject.org
Related reading
- Goodwill vs NMLP for book donation — sibling comparison, 501(c)(3) workforce-development model.
- Albuquerque Public Library vs NMLP — library system + Friends Bookshop side-by-side.
- Salvation Army vs NMLP — 501(c)(3) church-affiliated thrift with SATruck pickup, sibling comparison.
- arc Thrift Stores vs NMLP — sibling 501(c)(3) thrift comparison; arc supports people with intellectual and developmental disabilities through The Arc national network.
- Habitat ReStore vs NMLP — clarification page: Habitat ReStore at 4900 Menaul Blvd NE doesn’t accept books. Routes book donors to NMLP and explains what ReStore does take.
- Bookworks Albuquerque vs NMLP — clarification page: Bookworks (4022 Rio Grande Blvd NW) is a 41-year-old new-books-only indie bookstore. Doesn’t buy or accept used books. Routes donors to NMLP.
- Lifecycle of a donated book in Albuquerque — sourced investigation of every channel and what each does with the books.
- Complete guide: 18 Albuquerque book donation channels compared.
- Tax-deductible book donation in Albuquerque — honest map of which channels issue receipts.
Last reviewed 2026-05-15. NMLP is a for-profit New Mexico business; donations are not tax-deductible. Savers (TVI, Inc. dba Savers Value Village) is also for-profit; its donations are not tax-deductible at Savers itself, but a partner nonprofit may issue separate documentation. Both companies’ for-profit status is documented in their own published disclosures, linked in the Sources section. Corrections: [email protected].