Most people walk past old TV trays at Goodwill without a second thought. They look outdated, bland, flimsy, or simply boring. They’re the type of item you only notice when you need one—to eat on the couch, hold a laptop, or set snacks on movie night. But secondhand stores are full of them for a reason: they’re inexpensive, lightweight, sturdy enough for everyday use, and built from real wood far more often than people realize. And the truth is this: these trays are one of the most versatile, transformative, and shockingly useful thrift finds you can bring home.
All it takes is one look at the structure—a foldable frame, a wide flat surface, hardware already in place—and suddenly you start seeing possibilities. Every tray is a blank canvas waiting for reinvention. The simplicity of the design makes it adaptable to nearly any room in your home. With a little sanding, paint, stain, hardware, or creativity, you can turn these once-overlooked pieces into upgrades that look custom, stylish, and genuinely functional.
Below are ten ways to repurpose Goodwill TV trays—each one practical, accessible, and surprisingly impressive. But more important, each idea shows why this forgotten thrift-store staple is one of the smartest purchases you can make for under five dollars.
1. Turn It Into a Bedside Nightstand
A TV tray is nearly the perfect height for a bedside table. It slides against the bed with almost no footprint, holds a lamp, a book, a glass of water, or your phone charger, and takes up far less space than bulky furniture.
Sand it. Paint it. Add a small basket underneath for storage. Suddenly, the $4 tray looks like a minimalist Scandinavian nightstand.
And the best part? It folds and stores instantly if you rearrange your room or need space for guests. For small apartments, studio spaces, or tight bedrooms, this hack solves a problem without buying new furniture.
2. Create a Portable Coffee Bar
With a bit of stain or chalk paint, a TV tray becomes the perfect base for a mini coffee or tea station. Because it folds, you can keep it in the kitchen corner, roll it onto a balcony, or bring it beside the couch on cold mornings.
Add:
• A small basket for pods or tea sachets
• A mug stand
• A tiny spoon jar
• A cloth liner
The result looks curated and intentional—like something from Pinterest or an expensive boutique café.
It also becomes a great guest-room upgrade. Visitors get a little coffee nook without leaving their room.
3. Transform It Into a Laptop or Work-From-Home Desk
TV trays were originally built for eating and working in front of the television, but they’re ideal as compact workstations too. Their size fits laptops perfectly, and the foldable legs make them easy to move between rooms.
Paint it black or white for a modern look. Add a clear acrylic desktop cover for easy cleaning. Mount a small clip-on LED lamp or a lightweight organizer to hold pens and sticky notes.
For remote workers, especially those who shift between sofa, bed, kitchen table, and patio, these trays bring flexibility without buying a large desk.
4. Build a Plant Stand That Looks Designer-Made
Houseplants need stands, and plant stands are expensive. A TV tray—especially the wood ones—can instantly become a plant display. Remove the tray top and stain it darker. Add a waterproof sealer so soil and water won’t damage the wood.
Place two to three medium-sized plants on top, or one trailing plant that drapes dramatically. Suddenly, you’ve created vertical visual interest for under ten dollars.
If you want a tiered plant stand, stack two trays at different heights. Because they fold, you can rearrange them whenever needed.
5. Turn It Into a Kids’ Craft Table
Kids need a designated surface for painting, markers, modeling clay, coloring books, and snack-time chaos. A repurposed tray is the perfect solution.
Cover the top with:
• Chalkboard paint
• Whiteboard vinyl
• Peel-and-stick wallpaper
• Silicone craft mats
This gives children a contained creative zone that can be folded away instantly.
For parents, this tray becomes a lifesaver. No more art projects taking over the kitchen table. No more crayons disappearing into carpet fibers. No more glitter explosions on your dining set.
6. Use It as a Pet Feeding Station
If you own a dog or cat, you know how messy pet feeding areas can be. Water spills. Kibble scatters. Bowls slide around. A repurposed TV tray solves all of it.
Paint it to match your home. Add a waterproof liner. Place food and water bowls on top. The elevated height is especially good for older dogs or large breeds who struggle bending down.
If you want to customize it even further, attach small hooks on the side for leashes or treat bags. Suddenly your thrift-store tray becomes a polished pet-care station.
7. Build a Mini Bar or Cocktail Table
This project practically builds itself. A TV tray is already the perfect height for a bar setup. Sand it, stain it walnut brown, add brass handles or small rails to keep bottles steady, and display:
• A whiskey decanter
• Cocktail glasses
• A shaker
• A citrus bowl
• Decorative coasters
Roll it out on movie nights. Fold it up when not needed. People pay hundreds for mid-century bar carts, yet a $5 tray can give you the same aesthetic for a fraction of the cost.
8. Repurpose It as an Entryway Catch-All Table
Entryways get cluttered fast—keys, wallets, sunglasses, mail, dog leashes, earbuds, grocery lists. A small tray table in the foyer solves that instantly.
Place a decorative bowl or tray on top. Add a small vase or candle. Position a basket underneath for shoes or umbrellas.
Visitors assume you bought a minimalist entry table. Only you know it came from a Goodwill shelf with a $3 sticker.
This upgrade also helps small homes where traditional console tables are too wide.
9. Create an Outdoor Patio Table
Weatherproofing a TV tray is straightforward: sand it lightly and apply an exterior-grade polyurethane or clear sealant. Once protected, it becomes a perfect outdoor side table for patios, balconies, porches, fire pits, or poolside seating areas.
It holds drinks, snacks, books, citronella candles, or your phone. And if rain comes, fold it and bring it inside—no dragging heavy furniture.
For renters and balcony dwellers, this is one of the most cost-effective patio upgrades you can make.
10. Turn It Into a Mobile Art Display or Photo Stand
Artists and hobbyists know the struggle: you need a place to display ongoing work, or somewhere to set reference photos, canvases, sketchbooks, or materials. A TV tray becomes an adjustable platform for creativity.
Photographers use them for small backdrops. Painters use them to hold palettes and brushes. Crafters use them as portable staging areas.
Decorators use them for seasonal displays—mini pumpkins in fall, candles in winter, flowers in spring. They can hold framed photos like a small personal gallery.
Because the surface is flat and movable, you control lighting, angle, and height without bulky equipment.
But beyond these ten specific projects, the real brilliance of Goodwill trays is what they reveal about modern reuse. Our homes are full of expensive furniture that tries to be everything—desks with built-in chargers, bar carts with wheels, plant stands with geometric legs. Yet these thrift trays accomplish the same tasks with far more flexibility.
A tray has one job: hold.
But in your hands, it becomes whatever space requires.
This is why DIY creators adore them.
This is why interior designers love them as budget hacks.
This is why minimalists use them instead of bulky furniture.
This is why renters swear by them—they adapt to every move.
And here’s the hidden truth:
Most older TV trays were built better than the cheap versions sold today. Solid wood. Strong joints. Metal hardware. Smooth sanding. They were built to survive decades of use. When you buy one from Goodwill, you’re saving a piece of durable craftsmanship that would otherwise go to waste.
Sanding revives it.
Paint transforms it.
Stain modernizes it.
Hardware elevates it.
You are not buying junk—you are reclaiming potential.
Even the flaws tell a story worth keeping.
A tiny scratch? Sand it.
A sticky price tag? Remove it with heat.
A wobbly leg? Tighten two screws.
A water ring? Cover it with stain.
Every imperfection becomes a way to add character, not a reason to discard it.
The environmental impact matters too. Every tray reused is one less piece of wood in a landfill, one less new table produced, one less item shipped across the world. You are extending the life of something that was designed to last.
And perhaps more than anything, these trays become conversation pieces. When someone compliments your nightstand or patio table and you say, “Oh, I made it from a $5 Goodwill tray,” their eyes widen. Suddenly they begin imagining possibilities in their own homes.
Reuse spreads through inspiration.
The beauty of these trays is not that they’re nostalgic.
It’s that they’re endlessly adaptable.
You shape them.
They shape your space.
Whether you turn a tray into a work desk, a plant stand, a kids’ table, or an entryway organizer, you’re doing something that honors both creativity and practicality. You’re making your home more functional without spending money on cheap mass-produced furniture.
In the end, the overlooked tray becomes a lesson:
Great design doesn’t require big budgets.
It requires imagination, willingness, and a secondhand aisle no one else pays attention to.
Goodwill trays are not scraps.
They are blueprints.
Raw material.
Untapped usefulness.
And once you realize how powerful they are, you’ll never walk past one again without imagining what it could become next.