Solist

Rent from neighbors.Keep stuff out of landfills.

Most things people own get used a few times and then sit in a garage for years. Meanwhile, someone nearby needs that exact thing but can't justify buying it. Solist fixes that.

Our Story

Solist started because we noticed something wasteful: garages full of tools used once, closets full of gear from hobbies that didn't stick, equipment bought for a single project. At the same time, people nearby were buying the same things — or going without because they couldn't afford them.

We built Solist to connect people who have with people who need. Not through charity or complicated logistics — just neighbors renting to neighbors, with clear rules and fair accountability when things go wrong.

Every rental on Solist means one less item sitting unused, one less purchase that ends up in a landfill, and one more person who got what they needed without buying something new. That's the whole idea.

Why It Matters

Real impact, not marketing speak

Less Waste

80%

of household items are used less than once a month. Sharing keeps them out of landfills.

Real Savings

Renters save money on things they'd otherwise buy and never use again. Owners earn from what they already have.

Access for Everyone

Not everyone can afford to buy. Renting makes tools, equipment, and gear accessible to people who need them.

Second Life

Every rental is an item that didn't get thrown away, forgotten in a garage, or replaced by a new purchase.

Who This Is For

People with stuff

You bought a pressure washer for one project. A tent you used twice. Camera gear from a phase. Instead of letting it collect dust, rent it out and make money from things you already own.

People who need stuff

You need a tile saw for a weekend project. A kayak for one trip. Professional lighting for an event. Rent it locally, use it, return it. No need to buy something you'll use once.

Want to try it?

Browse what's available nearby or list something you're not using.

Questions about how it works? See our guide or read the Community Standard.