With this gold scrap value calculator, you can quickly determine the value of your gold based on current prices, so you get a fair offer on your trade-in.
Gold Scrap Value Calculator
Estimate the melt value and likely buyer offer for gold jewelry, coins, chains, rings, bracelets, dental gold, and scrap gold.
Your Gold Items
Add one or more items. Use a jewelry scale when possible for the most accurate estimate.
Estimated Offer Ranges
The calculator will estimate melt value, buyer payout, and whether a received offer looks low, fair, or strong.
Item Breakdown
| Item | Karat / Purity | Weight | Melt Value | Buyer Estimate |
|---|
This tool provides educational estimates only. Actual offers may vary based on gold testing, item condition, stones, non-gold parts, dealer margin, refining fees, and local market demand.
How the Gold Scrap Value Calculator Works
This calculator helps you get a rough idea of what your gold is worth before you walk into a pawn shop, jeweler, or cash-for-gold buyer. It’s not a guarantee, but it can give you a number to work with, which is much better than going in blind.
The calculator pulls the current gold spot price and adjusts it based on your item’s karat and weight. Those two things matter so you know the difference between a bad offer and a good one.
What You Need to Enter
**Karat.** This tells the calculator how much actual gold is in your piece. You can usually find it stamped somewhere on the item. A ring might say “14K,” “585,” or “750.” If you’re not sure, a jeweler can test it for a few dollars.
**Weight.** A digital jewelry scale gives the most accurate result. The calculator works in grams, pennyweight, troy ounces, and regular ounces, so use whatever you have.
**Buyer payout percentage.** This is how much of the estimated melt value a buyer might actually offer you. More on that below.
Why Karat Changes the Value
Gold jewelry isn’t always pure gold. It can be mixed with other metals to make it harder and more durable. That’s why a 14K chain and a 24K chain of the same weight aren’t worth the same thing.
Here’s the basic breakdown:
| Karat | Approximate Gold Purity |
|——-|————————–|
| 10K | 41.7% gold |
| 14K | 58.3% gold |
| 18K | 75% gold |
| 22K | 91.7% gold |
| 24K | 99.9% gold |
Two items, same weight. The one with a higher karat contains more gold. It’s worth more. Simple as that.
What Is Melt Value?
Melt value is what the gold inside your item is worth, not the item itself.
So if you’ve got a 14K bracelet, the calculator doesn’t treat the whole thing as pure gold. It figures out how much gold is actually in there based on the karat, then multiplies that by the current spot price.
That number is your melt value. Think of it as your baseline. It tells you what the raw material is worth, before anyone takes a cut.
Why Buyers Usually Pay Less Than Melt Value
Most gold buyers won’t pay you full melt value. That’s not automatically a scam. There are real costs involved: testing the gold, removing stones or clasps, refining or reselling, and keeping the lights on.
A payout somewhere between 70% and 85% of melt value is pretty common for scrap gold. But it varies a lot depending on the buyer, what you’re selling, where you are, and current demand.
The buyer payout field in the calculator lets you model this. If a buyer offers 75% of melt value and another offers 85%, the difference on a $600 item is $60 in your pocket. Worth knowing before you decide.
How to Use the Offer Checker
Already have a quote? Enter it into the calculator.
The tool will compare that offer to the estimated melt value and give you a sense of where it lands.
For example, if your gold has an estimated melt value of $500 and someone offers $250, that’s 50%. That’s on the low end. If they offer $400, that’s 80%. That’s more competitive.
It doesn’t tell you whether to take the deal. But it gives you a way to evaluate it instead of just guessing.
## What Types of Gold Can You Estimate?
Pretty much anything solid gold:
– Rings, chains, bracelets, necklaces
– Broken or tangled jewelry
– Single earrings and charms
– Dental gold
– Gold coins
– Scrap gold lots
One thing to watch: if your item has diamonds, gemstones, watch components, or non-gold parts, the estimate gets less precise. The calculator assumes the weight you enter is all gold-bearing material. If it’s not, adjust accordingly.
Tips Before You Sell
Weigh your gold first. Knowing the weight ahead of time puts you in a much better position before any conversation starts.
Check the karat stamp carefully. Markings like “GP,” “GF,” or “HGE” mean gold plated or gold filled, not solid gold. Those are worth a lot less.
Get more than one quote. Even a few percentage points difference in payout can add up, especially on heavier pieces.
Ask the buyer directly: “What percentage of melt value are you paying?” A reputable buyer should be able to answer that without hesitation.
A Quick Note on Accuracy
This calculator gives you an estimate, not a final number. The amount you actually receive depends on the buyer, how they test the gold, the condition of the item, any non-gold parts, refining fees, and where the market sits that day.
Use it as a starting point. Walk in knowing roughly what you’ve got. That alone puts you in a better position than most people who show up without any idea.