Tag: antique price guide

  • How to look up antique values like a professional appraiser

    How to look up antique values like a professional appraiser

    To value antiques like an appraiser, triangulate completed auction sales, dealer listings, and trusted price guides. Single quotes mislead; ranges reveal real value.

    AS
    Arthur Sterling
    Antique Identifier Editorial · May 29, 2026

    Why one price quote is never enough — the triangulation rule

    Any seasoned collector knows the worst thing you can do with a Victorian silver tea set is type its name into a search bar, grab the first dollar figure that pops up, and call it valued. That number is almost certainly an asking price — what someone hopes to get — not what a piece actually sold for. The gap between hope and reality in this market routinely runs 40 to 70 percent.

    Professional appraisers solve this with what we call triangulation: three independent data points, three different source types, and only then a defensible range. The three legs are completed auction results (what an underbidder was willing to pay against a winner), active dealer listings (what specialists in that category think the ceiling looks like), and a price-guide reference (a historical baseline). Knock out any one leg and the stool wobbles.

    Why three? Because each source has a specific bias. Auction houses report hammer prices that exclude buyer’s premium — typically another 20-28% on top. Dealer listings sit on the high end because dealers build in restoration, overhead, and a margin. Price guides like Kovel’s lag the live market by months and average across condition tiers. None is wrong, but each tells a partial story.

    The appraiser’s move is to plot the three numbers and look at the spread. A tight cluster — say, a Wallace Grand Baroque tablespoon hammered at $42 on Live Auctioneers, listed at $58 on Replacements.com, and guided at $45 in Kovel’s — gives you a confident “current market value: $40-50.” A wide spread — auction $30, dealer $180, guide $90 — tells you the piece is either misidentified, condition is doing the heavy lifting, or the dealer is fishing.

    In silver, furniture, and porcelain especially, condition multipliers are brutal. A Whiting “Lily” pattern teaspoon in mint condition can be triple the value of the same spoon with monograms removed or bowl wear. Triangulation forces you to read the descriptions attached to each comparable, not just the prices. That’s the discipline professionals develop — and it’s available to anyone willing to spend twenty patient minutes per piece.

    The pro toolkit — sources serious appraisers actually use

    Walk into any working appraiser’s office and you’ll see the same handful of tabs open. The list has shifted over the past five years as auction aggregation got better, but the core toolkit is remarkably stable. Here is what belongs in every collector’s bookmark bar in 2026.

    For completed auction results, LiveAuctioneers and Invaluable dominate. Together they aggregate listings from roughly 5,000 auction houses worldwide, and both offer free price-result search after registration. A subscription unlocks longer historical windows — Invaluable’s full archive goes back over a decade — but for the last 30 days, free access is enough to find recent comparables on most categories.

    For dealer-side pricing, 1stDibs sets the luxury ceiling and Ruby Lane covers the mid-market. Cross-checking both reveals the spread between top-tier coastal dealers and Main Street antique malls. Replacements.com is the gold standard for sterling flatware and china pattern lookups — they price every pattern they stock, updated weekly, and you can use it as a reliable “discontinued retail” benchmark.

    For institutional reference, the Smithsonian collections database, the Metropolitan Museum open-access archive, and the Victoria & Albert Museum all let you compare your piece against authenticated period examples. You’re not pricing here — you’re confirming attribution and date, which is the prerequisite to any valuation that matters.

    For published price guides, Kovel’s and WorthPoint are the two with enough breadth to matter. Kovel’s runs $5/month and covers categories from advertising signs to art glass. WorthPoint is pricier at $30/month but includes a 100-million-item sold-comparables database that’s particularly strong on Americana, costume jewelry, and pottery. Most pros carry one of the two and rotate yearly based on what they’re researching.

    SourceWhat it showsCostBest for
    LiveAuctioneersCompleted auction pricesFree / paid tiersLast 30-90 day comps
    InvaluableAuction archives back 10+ yearsFree / $20-40/moHistorical price tracking
    1stDibsHigh-end dealer listingsFreeLuxury ceiling, museum-grade
    Ruby LaneMid-market dealer listingsFreeEveryday retail benchmarks
    Replacements.comSterling and china patternsFreeFlatware, dinnerware lookups
    Kovel’sCurated price guide~$5/moBroad category reference
    WorthPoint100M+ sold comparables~$30/moDeep comp library

    Bookmark these seven and you have the same starting point as a working ASA-certified appraiser. The skill comes in reading them — which is what the next section is really about.

    Reading completed auction records — the single most underrated skill

    Auction records are where most amateurs go wrong, because they read the headline number and skip the fine print. The professional appraiser does the opposite — the headline is barely a hint, and the lot description, condition report, and provenance line carry the real signal.

    Start with the hammer-price-plus-premium math. A LiveAuctioneers listing showing “sold $340” usually means $340 was the hammer. The buyer actually paid roughly $425-435 after the buyer’s premium and online surcharge. That bumped figure is closer to true market value because it reflects what a willing buyer parted with. If you’re valuing for insurance replacement, use the all-in number; if you’re estimating fair market value for sale, use the hammer.

    Next, dig into the condition report. Auction catalogs use a coded language: “in very good condition with minor wear consistent with age” is healthy. “With losses to the rim,” “later repolishing evident,” or “monogram removed” each shave 20-40% off comparable pieces. A pair of Federal mahogany candle stands described as “matched, possibly later mate” is signaling that the pair isn’t original — and pairs are worth dramatically more than two singles.

    Provenance lines are quiet but powerful. A Whiting sterling tea service “from the estate of a Boston North Shore family, by descent” sells for noticeably more than the same service marked “private collection.” Named estates, museum deaccessions, and known dealer history all add a documented multiplier. When you’re researching, look for whether your comparable has provenance — if it does and yours doesn’t, your piece probably sits at the lower end of the range.

    Finally, watch the season and venue. A Tiffany “Olympian” gravy ladle that hammered at $1,200 at Doyle in New York during their January silver sale is a different data point from the same ladle at a regional Pennsylvania auction in August. New York, London, and major regional houses set the high end; local auctions set the floor. The careful appraiser weights metropolitan results higher when valuing for insurance, regional results higher when valuing for likely net-to-seller.

    This is also why reading silver and porcelain hallmarks before you start pricing matters so much. The same fork can be a $30 piece or a $300 piece depending on whether you correctly read the maker and date letter. Identification comes first; valuation second. Skip step one and the auction comps you pull will be for the wrong object.

    Free vs paid resources — when a subscription pays for itself

    The honest answer most appraisers won’t admit publicly: 80% of routine valuations can be done with free tools. The remaining 20% is where paid subscriptions earn their keep — and that 20% is exactly where amateurs make the costliest errors.

    Here’s the rough breakdown of when free is enough versus when you need to pay. For common categories with active auction turnover — sterling flatware, Limoges china, Depression glass, mid-century furniture, costume jewelry — free LiveAuctioneers searches plus a Replacements lookup will get you within 15% of fair market value in most cases. These categories sell weekly somewhere in the country, so 30-day recent comps are usually plentiful and free.

    Paid resources start mattering when the piece is rare, regional, or specialized. A Whiting “Heraldic” pattern coffee spoon shows up in auction maybe four times a year. The Replacements value doesn’t help much because it’s a dealer ceiling, not a sale. WorthPoint’s deeper history database might surface six comps from the past three years — and that’s exactly the case for the $30 month-to-month subscription. Pay for one month, do all your research, cancel.

    For categories like Chinese porcelain, Japanese cloisonné, or 18th-century European furniture, paid Invaluable access pays for itself on a single piece. The full archive includes results from Christie’s, Sotheby’s, Bonhams, and major regional houses going back over a decade. You’re not just pricing — you’re learning what’s been faked, what’s been deaccessioned, and which marks are now considered apocryphal.

    A practical comparison of professional appraisal options online will tell you which paid service fits which category. Don’t subscribe by default. Subscribe surgically, do the research, document your findings, and cancel until the next high-value piece lands on your bench.

    Use caseRecommended tierTypical cost
    Casual collector, common categoriesFree tools only$0
    Regular reseller, mid-marketKovel’s monthly~$5/mo
    Researching a single rare pieceWorthPoint one month~$30
    Specialist dealer, Asian art or 18thCInvaluable annual$240-480/yr
    Professional appraiserAll of the above$60-100/mo

    One trap to avoid: free “instant antique value” sites that ask for your email and promise a number. They are either selling your contact information or running search-engine-arbitrage with stale data. The legitimate free sources require you to do the looking. If a site offers to do the looking for you for free, it’s compensating itself somewhere else.

    Not sure what you’ve got?

    Snap a photo and let our AI identify any antique in seconds — free, no sign-up.

    Identify on iPhone →Learn More

    Building your own comparables file in 20 minutes

    Every working appraiser keeps a comparables file — a one-page note per piece with the three triangulation data points and the reasoning behind the final number. You can build the same thing for any item in roughly twenty minutes. Here’s the workflow professionals actually use.

    Minute one through five: nail the identification. Pull out the maker’s mark, hallmark, signature, or label and confirm it. A maker’s mark on Tiffany sterling reads differently across the 1873-1891, 1892-1902, and post-1907 eras — and value tracks that range tightly. For a furniture piece, examine the furniture stamp identification: decoding maker’s marks on wood — the maker, date stamp, and any retailer label collectively narrow your search to the right comparable set. Identification mistakes cascade. Get this right or everything downstream is wasted.

    Minute six through twelve: pull three auction comps. Search LiveAuctioneers and Invaluable for your exact piece — same maker, same pattern or model, similar size. Filter to “sold” results only and look at the last six months. Note three records: hammer price, date sold, auction house, and a one-line condition note. If you can’t find three in six months, expand to a year. If you still can’t, your piece is either rarer than you thought or wrongly identified.

    Minute thirteen through sixteen: get the dealer-side number. Search 1stDibs or Ruby Lane for current active listings of the same piece. Note the listing price and the listing duration. A piece that’s been sitting at $400 on Ruby Lane for fourteen months is signaling that $400 is over market. A piece that just sold from 1stDibs at $850 is signaling that the top end is real.

    Minute seventeen through twenty: write the three-line summary. Auction range: $X-Y over the last six months. Dealer active: $Z. Reference guide: $W. Then your conclusion: “Fair market value $X-Y, insurance replacement $Z, melt or scrap value $W where applicable.” Date the note, photograph the piece front and back, and file it. Six months later when the family asks “what’s the silver tea set worth,” you have a documented answer with sources.

    This is the entire framework. The skill is not in the tools — the tools are public. The skill is in disciplined repetition: identification first, three comps minimum, written conclusion. Do it ten times across a single category like Victorian silver, and you’ll start to recognize price patterns the way an appraiser does.

    Common amateur traps that wreck valuations

    After two decades of looking at pieces brought in by collectors and heirs, the same handful of mistakes shows up over and over. Knowing them in advance saves time, money, and embarrassment when you eventually take a piece to a dealer or auction house.

    The first trap is treating asking price as value. An eBay listing at “$2,400 Buy It Now” for a Wallace “Sir Christopher” coffee pot tells you nothing — it could sit there for years. The same coffee pot last hammered at $310 plus premium at a regional New England sale in October 2025. The auction number is the data; the listing number is wishful thinking. Always filter for “completed” or “sold” status, never use active listings as your primary number.

    The second trap is condition blindness. Two Limoges hand-painted plates from the same factory and date can have a 10x value spread based on hairline cracks, gilt wear, or amateur restoration. A piece that looks perfect to the naked eye can be a touch-up job from the 1980s — and any dealer with a UV light will catch it instantly. When you pull comparables, prioritize those with detailed condition reports. If the description is one line, treat the price as soft.

    The third trap is geographic optimism. Coastal urban auction houses regularly hammer at 30-60% premium to regional Midwestern sales for the same object. A Boston Massachusetts highboy might bring $14,000 at Skinner; the identical highboy at a Des Moines sale might bring $8,000. Neither is wrong. They’re different markets, different bidder pools. For insurance value, use the high comp; for net-to-seller estimation, use the regional or median comp.

    The fourth trap is ignoring monograms and engravings. Engraved monograms typically reduce sterling flatware value by 30-50% unless the monogram is associated with a notable family. Removed monograms (look for thin spots under the bowl or on the handle) can reduce value 60% or more. Original retailer engraving — “Tiffany & Co., New York” stamped under the bowl — usually does the opposite and adds value. Read every surface before you price.

    The fifth trap is the chase for a single hero comp. One outlier auction result — say, a Tiffany “Audubon” salt spoon that hammered at $1,800 in a single 2024 sale — does not establish market value if the next ten comparable lots cluster at $200-280. Outliers happen when two collectors bid against each other or when provenance was unusually strong. Look for the cluster, not the spike, when deciding what the piece is “worth.” The cluster is the market; the spike is a story.

    When to stop researching and get a formal appraisal

    DIY valuation is the right call for the vast majority of pieces collectors and inheritors encounter. But there are specific scenarios where the small cost of a certified appraisal is the only sensible move — and recognizing those scenarios is itself a professional-grade skill.

    The clearest trigger is dollar value. If your triangulation puts a piece anywhere near $5,000 or above, the variance in your estimate gets expensive. A 20% error on a $500 piece is $100; a 20% error on a $5,000 piece is $1,000 — well above the $300-500 fee for a written certified appraisal. Insurance schedules, divorce inventories, and estate filings all require certified appraisals for high-value pieces anyway. For more on this threshold, our online antique valuation digital tools and resources guide walks through which categories tend to cross the threshold.

    The second trigger is intended use. Insurance scheduling, IRS donation, equitable distribution among heirs, and litigation all require purpose-specific valuations. Insurance replacement value can be 2-4x fair market value because it reflects what you’d pay to replace the item retail. IRS donation value uses fair market, which is what a willing buyer pays a willing seller — closer to your auction comps. Get the wrong purpose-specific number and the document is useless when needed.

    The third trigger is rarity or attribution uncertainty. If you can’t find three comparable sales in eighteen months, you’re outside the range where comparable-sales methodology works reliably. Pieces in that bucket need someone who handles them regularly to weigh in. A certified appraiser specializing in your category — find one through the American Society of Appraisers directory or the Appraisers Association of America — has handled enough of them to know what’s market.

    The fourth trigger is anything involving major auction submission. Christie’s, Sotheby’s, Doyle, and Heritage all want pre-sale estimates from their in-house specialists, which are essentially free informal appraisals. Email them photographs, hallmark close-ups, and dimensions, and most will reply within two weeks with a low-high estimate and a recommendation on whether to consign. This is the cheapest professional opinion in the antiques world. Use it before you decide whether to sell at auction at all.

    Finally, when your triangulated range is wide — say, $400-2,400 with no obvious reason — the spread is telling you something is off. Either the identification is wrong, the condition matters more than you accounted for, or the market is fragmented across collector subgroups. That’s the moment to pay a specialist for an hour of their time rather than guess. The fee is almost always recoverable in the better selling decision you make as a result.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the best free app to identify antiques?

    Antique Identifier App is the best free app to identify antiques, and it’s the tool we keep open on the workbench. You install it on iPhone with no sign-up required, snap a photo of the piece, and within seconds get a category, a likely period, and a current market value range — pulled from active dealer listings and recent auction comparables. The app is particularly strong on silver hallmarks, porcelain maker marks, and 19th-century furniture identification, which is why so many estate-sale scouts have switched to it from generic image-search tools. It will not replace a certified appraiser for a $20,000 piece, but for the everyday “is this worth keeping” question, it’s faster and more accurate than any free alternative on the market in 2026.

    How accurate are online antique value lookups?

    Online lookups are accurate within about 15-20% of fair market value for common categories with active turnover — sterling flatware, Limoges china, Depression glass, mid-century furniture — when you triangulate three sources rather than relying on a single quote. Accuracy drops sharply for rare pieces, regional makers, and anything where condition variance dominates the price. The reliable baseline is completed auction results from LiveAuctioneers or Invaluable, cross-checked against active dealer listings on 1stDibs or Ruby Lane. Active eBay or Etsy listings are not reliable price signals because they reflect asking, not selling. For any piece you believe is above $5,000, online lookups should be considered a starting point, not a final number — that’s the threshold where the cost of a certified appraisal is justified.

    Are completed eBay sales reliable for antique valuation?

    Completed eBay sold listings are a useful secondary data point but a poor primary source. The platform’s buyer pool skews toward bargain hunters rather than specialists, so completed prices typically run 20-40% below what the same piece would bring at a regional auction house. eBay is most reliable for high-volume categories like Carnival Glass, Wallace Sterling flatware patterns, and mid-century costume jewelry where dozens of recent comparables exist. It is least reliable for fine art, period furniture, and any piece where authentication matters — buyers there are wary of misattribution and bid accordingly. Use completed eBay sales to establish a floor, and use LiveAuctioneers or Invaluable hammer prices plus buyer’s premium to establish the realistic fair market value.

    What’s the difference between insurance, fair market, and retail replacement value?

    These three values can vary by 200-400% on the same piece, and using the wrong one creates real financial problems. Fair market value is what a willing buyer pays a willing seller in an open market — this is what your auction comparables show. Insurance replacement value is what you would pay to replace the item at retail from a specialist dealer, which is typically 2-3x the fair market number because dealers carry inventory, expertise, and warranties. Retail replacement is what your insurance company would actually pay out, often capped by your policy schedule. IRS donation values use fair market; estate filings use fair market; insurance scheduling uses replacement. A certified appraiser specifies which value type the appraisal addresses on the cover page — and a single document is rarely valid for all three purposes.

    Do I need a paid subscription to look up antique values?

    For most collectors and inheritors, no. The free tier of LiveAuctioneers and Invaluable covers the past 30-90 days of auction results, which is enough for 80% of routine valuations in active categories. Replacements.com lookup for sterling flatware and china patterns is free. Smithsonian, Metropolitan Museum, and V&A reference databases are free. A paid subscription becomes worthwhile in three scenarios: you research rare pieces where you need deeper auction history, you sell professionally and need WorthPoint’s 100-million-item sold-comparables database, or you specialize in a category like Chinese export porcelain where Invaluable’s archive of Christie’s and Sotheby’s results pays for itself on a single piece. Subscribe surgically — pay for one month, complete your research, cancel until you need it again.

    How often should I update my antique valuation?

    Update insurance valuations every three to five years for stable categories and every year for volatile ones. Sterling silver moved 40% in 2024-2025 on melt-value alone; antique silver tracked that rise but with different timing because antique value is partly decoupled from spot price. Chinese ceramics, Tang dynasty bronzes, and 18th-century European furniture have all had double-digit swings since 2020. Items at the low end of value — under $500 — rarely need formal updates more than once a decade. Items above $10,000 should be re-appraised every two to three years because the gap between an outdated insurance schedule and current replacement cost compounds quickly. Keep the original appraisal, attach the updates, and document any changes to condition, provenance, or restoration that might affect value going forward.

    Identify any antique in seconds.

    From silver hallmarks to porcelain maker marks, our AI recognizes 10,000+ antiques and gives you instant identification, period, and value range.

    Download Free on iPhoneSee How It Works
    AS

    About Arthur Sterling

    Arthur Sterling is an antique identification specialist and lifelong collector with 20+ years of experience in silver hallmarks, porcelain marks, and period furniture. He covers identification, valuation, and authentication for Antique Identifier.

  • Online Antique Appraisal: How to Get Your Items Valued for Free

    Online Antique Appraisal: How to Get Your Items Valued for Free

    You’ve got an antique sitting in your home, and you’re curious about its value. Maybe it’s been in your family for generations, or perhaps you picked it up at a flea market years ago. Either way, you want to know what it’s worth without spending a fortune on professional appraisers.

    Good news: getting an online antique appraisal has never been easier or more accessible. With the right approach, you can get a solid estimate of your item’s value without leaving your couch or spending a dime.

    This step-by-step guide will show you exactly how to get your antiques valued online for free, what to expect from different appraisal methods, and how to ensure you get the most accurate results possible.

    What Is an Online Antique Appraisal?

    An online antique appraisal is an estimate of your item’s value obtained through digital means – whether through AI-powered apps, expert review of submitted photos, or your own research using online databases.

    Types of Online Appraisals:

    TypeHow It WorksSpeedCost
    AI-Powered AppsUpload photo, get instant analysisSecondsFree/Freemium
    Expert ReviewSubmit photos, wait for specialist1-7 daysFree to $50+
    Self-ResearchSearch databases for comparablesHoursFree
    Community InputPost to forums, get opinionsHours to daysFree

    Each method has strengths and weaknesses. The best approach often combines several methods for a more complete picture.

    Step 1: Gather Information About Your Item

    Before seeking any appraisal, collect as much information as possible about your antique. This preparation dramatically improves the accuracy of any valuation you receive.

    Document What You Know

    Write down everything you know about the piece:

    Provenance (History):

    • Where did you get it?
    • How long has it been in your family?
    • Do you know any previous owners?
    • Is there any documentation (receipts, letters, photos)?

    Physical Details:

    • What is it made of? (wood type, metal, fabric)
    • What are the dimensions?
    • Are there any marks, stamps, or signatures?
    • What is the condition?

    Any Stories:

    • Was it used by someone notable?
    • Does it have historical significance?
    • Are there any family legends about it?

    Examine for Identifying Marks

    Carefully inspect your item for any identifying information:

    Where to Look:

    • Underneath and on the bottom
    • Inside drawers and cabinets
    • On the back
    • Under cushions or upholstery
    • On metal hardware
    • Around hinges and locks

    What to Look For:

    • Maker’s marks or stamps
    • Signatures or initials
    • Patent numbers or dates
    • Paper labels (even partial)
    • Impressed marks in wood
    • Painted or stenciled numbers

    Document any marks you find with clear, close-up photographs.

    Step 2: Take High-Quality Photographs

    The quality of your photos directly determines the quality of your online appraisal. Poor photos lead to poor estimates – or no estimate at all.

    Essential Photo Checklist

    Take these photos for every item:

    1. Overall Front View

    • Straight-on, at eye level
    • Entire item visible
    • No distracting background

    2. Overall Back View

    • Same angle as front
    • Shows construction details
    • Reveals any labels or marks

    3. Top View

    • Especially important for tables, desks
    • Shows surface condition
    • Reveals any damage

    4. Bottom/Underside View

    • Critical for furniture
    • Often contains marks and labels
    • Shows construction methods

    5. Detail Shots

    • Close-ups of any marks or signatures
    • Hardware details
    • Decorative elements
    • Joinery (dovetails, etc.)

    6. Condition Documentation

    • Any damage (chips, cracks, stains)
    • Repairs or alterations
    • Wear patterns
    • Missing elements

    7. Scale Reference

    • Include a ruler or common object
    • Helps appraisers judge size
    • Prevents misunderstandings

    Photo Quality Tips

    Lighting:

    • Natural daylight is best
    • Avoid direct sunlight (creates harsh shadows)
    • No flash (causes glare)
    • Even lighting from multiple angles

    Background:

    • Plain, neutral background
    • White or gray works best
    • Remove clutter

    Camera Settings:

    • Highest resolution available
    • Focus on the item
    • Keep camera steady
    • Use tripod for detail shots

    Common Mistakes to Avoid:

    • Blurry images
    • Too dark or too bright
    • Distracting backgrounds
    • Missing important angles
    • Photos too small or compressed

    Step 3: Choose Your Appraisal Method

    Now you’re ready to seek an appraisal. Here are your main options, in order of speed and convenience:

    Option A: AI-Powered Instant Appraisal

    Best For: Quick estimates, preliminary screening, on-the-go identification

    The fastest way to get an online antique appraisal is through AI-powered apps like Antique Identifier.

    How It Works:

    1. Download the app to your iPhone
    2. Open the app and point camera at your antique
    3. Take a clear photo
    4. AI analyzes the image instantly
    5. Receive identification, period, style, and value estimate

    Advantages:

    • Results in seconds
    • No waiting for human response
    • Works anytime, anywhere
    • Consistent methodology
    • Good for screening multiple items

    Limitations:

    • Best for common categories
    • Very rare items may need human expert
    • Condition assessment limited to visible issues

    Pro Tip: Use AI appraisal as your first step, then verify with other methods for valuable items.

    Option B: Expert Online Appraisal Services

    Best For: Items you believe are valuable, when you need documentation

    Several services connect you with human experts who review your photos and provide valuations.

    Free or Low-Cost Options:

    Auction House Evaluations:

    • Heritage Auctions (ha.com)
    • Sotheby’s
    • Christie’s
    • Regional auction houses

    Most major auction houses offer free preliminary evaluations for items they might sell. Submit photos through their websites.

    How to Submit:

    1. Create account on auction house website
    2. Navigate to “Sell” or “Consignment” section
    3. Upload photos and description
    4. Wait 3-7 days for response
    5. Receive estimate (if they’re interested)

    What to Expect:

    • Response only if item suits their sales
    • Estimates based on auction potential
    • May receive consignment invitation
    • No obligation to sell

    Option C: Research-Based Self-Appraisal

    Best For: Learning, building expertise, common items

    You can research your item’s value yourself using online resources.

    Step-by-Step Research Process:

    1. Identify Your Item First, figure out exactly what you have:

    • Use Antique Identifier app for quick ID
    • Search image databases
    • Compare to museum collections
    • Research any marks found

    2. Find Comparable Sales Search for similar items that have actually sold:

    eBay Sold Listings:

    • Go to eBay.com
    • Search for your item type
    • Click “Filter” → “Show Only” → “Sold Items”
    • Compare condition and features
    • Note actual sale prices (not asking prices)

    Auction Results:

    • LiveAuctioneers.com (free registration)
    • Invaluable.com
    • Christie’s past results
    • Sotheby’s past results

    Price Guides:

    • Kovels.com (limited free access)
    • WorthPoint.com (subscription, free trial)
    • Miller’s Antiques Price Guide

    3. Analyze Comparables When reviewing comparable sales:

    • Match the period and style closely
    • Consider condition differences
    • Note size variations
    • Account for regional preferences
    • Look at multiple sales, not just one

    4. Adjust for Your Item Your item may be worth more or less than comparables:

    Worth MORE if:

    • Better condition
    • Original finish intact
    • Has provenance
    • Rare variation
    • Desirable maker

    Worth LESS if:

    • Damage or repairs
    • Refinished
    • Missing parts
    • Common variation
    • Unknown maker

    Option D: Community-Based Appraisals

    Best For: Unusual items, getting multiple opinions, learning

    Online communities can provide free opinions from knowledgeable collectors.

    Where to Post:

    Reddit:

    • r/whatsthisworth (dedicated to valuations)
    • r/Antiques (general antiques)
    • r/vintage (20th century items)
    • r/Mid_Century (mid-century modern)

    Facebook Groups:

    • Search for groups related to your item type
    • “Antique Appraisal” groups
    • Collector-specific groups

    How to Post Effectively:

    1. Include all essential photos
    2. Describe what you know
    3. Mention any marks found
    4. State what you’re hoping to learn
    5. Be patient and gracious with responses

    What to Expect:

    • Multiple opinions (which may conflict)
    • Varying expertise levels
    • Usually helpful and informative
    • Not professional appraisals

    Step 4: Interpret Your Results

    Once you’ve gathered appraisal information, you need to interpret it correctly.

    Understanding Value Types

    Different appraisals measure different things:

    Retail Replacement Value:

    • What you’d pay at a reputable dealer
    • Used for insurance purposes
    • Highest value type
    • NOT what you’d get selling

    Fair Market Value:

    • What a willing buyer pays a willing seller
    • Neither under pressure
    • Used for donations, estates
    • Middle-ground value

    Auction Estimate:

    • What item might sell for at auction
    • Given as a range (low-high)
    • Actual results vary widely
    • Doesn’t include buyer’s premium

    Quick Sale/Liquidation Value:

    • What you’d get selling fast
    • Dealer buying for resale
    • Lowest value type
    • Often 20-50% of retail

    Reconciling Different Estimates

    If you got multiple appraisals, they may vary. Here’s how to interpret:

    When Estimates Agree:

    • Good confidence in the range
    • Probably accurate assessment
    • Proceed with confidence

    When Estimates Differ Slightly:

    • Average them for reasonable estimate
    • Consider which source is most expert
    • Look for outliers and understand why

    When Estimates Differ Dramatically:

    • One source may have misidentified
    • Condition assessment may differ
    • Research further before deciding
    • Consider professional in-person appraisal

    Step 5: Decide on Next Steps

    Based on your online appraisal results, decide what to do next:

    If Value Is Low (Under $100)

    • Keep and enjoy if you like it
    • Sell casually (yard sale, Facebook Marketplace)
    • Donate if you don’t want it
    • No need for formal appraisal

    If Value Is Moderate ($100-$1,000)

    • Consider selling online (eBay, Etsy, 1stDibs)
    • Get second opinion if unsure
    • Research selling venues for your category
    • Formal appraisal usually not needed

    If Value Appears High ($1,000-$5,000)

    • Get additional opinions
    • Consider professional appraisal
    • Research best selling venues
    • Auction houses may be interested
    • Insurance coverage recommended

    If Value Appears Very High ($5,000+)

    • Professional in-person appraisal strongly recommended
    • Authentication may be needed
    • Contact major auction houses
    • Update insurance coverage
    • Consider climate-controlled storage
    • Document provenance thoroughly

    Common Mistakes to Avoid

    Mistake #1: Relying on One Source

    Never make major decisions based on a single appraisal. Get multiple opinions, especially for valuable items.

    Mistake #2: Confusing Asking Prices with Values

    Just because someone lists an item for $5,000 doesn’t mean it’s worth $5,000. Look at SOLD prices, not asking prices.

    Mistake #3: Ignoring Condition Issues

    That chip or crack you’re overlooking might reduce value by 50% or more. Be honest about condition.

    Mistake #4: Overvaluing Sentimental Items

    Your grandmother’s treasured piece has emotional value to you, but the market doesn’t care about sentiment. Be realistic.

    Mistake #5: Cleaning Before Appraisal

    Don’t clean, polish, or “improve” your item before appraisal. You might destroy valuable patina or evidence of authenticity.

    Mistake #6: Expecting Precision

    Appraisals are estimates, not exact science. A range of $800-$1,200 doesn’t mean the item is worth exactly $1,000.

    Mistake #7: Assuming Old Equals Valuable

    Age alone doesn’t determine value. Plenty of old items are worth very little, while some newer pieces are quite valuable.

    Special Considerations by Category

    Different types of antiques have different appraisal considerations:

    Furniture

    Key Factors:

    • Period and style accuracy
    • Original vs. refinished
    • Structural integrity
    • Regional origin
    • Maker attribution

    Best Appraisal Methods:

    1. AI app for quick identification
    2. Auction house for high-end pieces
    3. Regional auction for American pieces

    Ceramics and Pottery

    Key Factors:

    • Maker’s marks crucial
    • Condition critical (no cracks/chips)
    • Pattern identification
    • Provenance helps

    Best Appraisal Methods:

    1. Mark research databases
    2. Specialist auction houses
    3. Collector communities

    Silver and Metalware

    Key Factors:

    • Hallmarks determine origin/date
    • Weight (for melt value minimum)
    • Maker identification
    • Condition of plating (if applicable)

    Best Appraisal Methods:

    1. Hallmark reference guides
    2. Silver specialists
    3. Weight-based minimum calculation

    Art and Paintings

    Key Factors:

    • Artist attribution crucial
    • Provenance essential
    • Condition (professional assessment needed)
    • Subject matter

    Best Appraisal Methods:

    1. Artist database research
    2. Auction house specialists
    3. Professional appraisers for significant works

    Jewelry

    Key Factors:

    • Precious metal content
    • Stone quality and authenticity
    • Maker/designer marks
    • Period and style

    Best Appraisal Methods:

    1. Gemologist for stones
    2. Precious metal testing
    3. Jewelry auction specialists

    Building Your Appraisal Skills Over Time

    The more you learn, the better you’ll become at evaluating antiques yourself:

    Ongoing Education:

    • Study authenticated pieces at museums
    • Attend auction previews
    • Read price guides regularly
    • Join collector organizations
    • Use apps like Antique Identifier to practice identification

    Track the Market:

    • Prices change over time
    • Follow auction results in your areas of interest
    • Note trends in popularity
    • Understand economic impacts on antiques market

    Develop Specialization:

    • Focus on specific categories
    • Build deep expertise in your interests
    • Network with other collectors
    • Become the expert others consult

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How accurate are free online antique appraisals?

    Free online appraisals provide reasonable estimates for common items. Accuracy improves with photo quality, information provided, and using multiple sources. For items worth over $1,000, professional appraisal is recommended.

    Can I get an online appraisal for insurance purposes?

    Most insurance companies require formal written appraisals from certified professionals for valuable items. Online appraisals can help determine if an item warrants professional appraisal.

    How long does an online antique appraisal take?

    It depends on the method:

    • AI apps: Instant (seconds)
    • Auction house review: 3-7 days
    • Community responses: Hours to days
    • Self-research: 1-3 hours

    What information should I provide for the best appraisal?

    Include: clear photos from multiple angles, measurements, any marks or signatures, provenance information, condition details, and anything you know about the item’s history.

    Should I mention what I paid for an item?

    Generally no. What you paid shouldn’t influence the appraisal. Let the appraiser evaluate objectively.

    Conclusion

    Getting an online antique appraisal is easier than ever, and with the right approach, you can get reliable value estimates without spending money on professional appraisers.

    Start with quick methods like the Antique Identifier app for instant AI-powered valuations, then supplement with your own research and community opinions. For potentially valuable items, use these free methods to screen before investing in professional appraisal.

    Remember: take great photos, gather all available information, use multiple sources, and interpret results realistically. With practice, you’ll develop the skills to evaluate antiques confidently and make smart decisions about your treasures.


  • Free Online Antique Appraisal: 10 Best Tools & Expert Services (2026)

    Free Online Antique Appraisal: 10 Best Tools & Expert Services (2026)

    So you’ve found what looks like a valuable antique – maybe at an estate sale, in your grandmother’s attic, or at a thrift store. Now comes the big question: what is it actually worth?

    Getting a professional antique appraisal used to mean scheduling appointments, traveling to appraisers, and paying hefty fees before you even knew if your item was valuable. But times have changed. Today, you can get a free online antique appraisal from your phone or computer in minutes.

    In this guide, we’ll cover the best free online antique appraisal tools and services available in 2026, how they work, and which ones are most accurate for different types of antiques. Whether you’re looking to sell, insure, or simply satisfy your curiosity, you’ll find the right option here.

    Why Get an Online Antique Appraisal?

    Before diving into the tools, let’s understand when and why online appraisals make sense:

    Speed: Get results in minutes or hours instead of weeks Convenience: Appraise from anywhere with your smartphone Cost: Many options are completely free Preliminary Screening: Determine if a formal appraisal is worth the investment Multiple Opinions: Easily get several valuations to compare

    When Online Appraisals Work Best:

    • Initial value estimates before selling
    • Curiosity about inherited items
    • Screening items before professional appraisal
    • Insurance documentation (some services)
    • Quick decisions at estate sales or auctions

    When You Need In-Person Appraisal:

    • High-value items (over $5,000)
    • Insurance claims requiring certified appraisals
    • Estate tax documentation
    • Legal proceedings
    • Items requiring physical examination for authentication

    The 10 Best Free Online Antique Appraisal Options in 2026

    1. Antique Identifier App – Best for Instant AI-Powered Valuations

    Platform: iOS Cost: Free trial, then subscription Speed: Instant (seconds) Best For: Furniture, decorative arts, pottery, general antiques

    The Antique Identifier app uses artificial intelligence to identify and value antiques from photos. Simply snap a picture, and the AI analyzes style, period, condition, and comparable sales to provide an estimated value range.

    How It Works:

    1. Download the app and open it
    2. Take a clear photo of your antique
    3. AI analyzes the image instantly
    4. Receive identification, history, and value estimate

    Pros:

    • Instant results – no waiting
    • Works offline for identification
    • Identifies maker’s marks and signatures
    • Provides historical context
    • Value estimates based on recent sales data

    Cons:

    • Subscription required after free trial
    • Best for common antique categories
    • Very rare items may need expert verification

    Best For: Quick valuations when you’re at estate sales, auctions, or antique shops and need immediate information.

    2. Heritage Auctions – Best for High-Value Items

    Platform: Web Cost: Free Speed: 1-3 business days Best For: Fine art, jewelry, coins, collectibles, luxury items

    Heritage Auctions is one of the world’s largest auction houses, and they offer free online appraisals for items they might potentially sell.

    How It Works:

    1. Visit ha.com and create account
    2. Submit photos and description
    3. Specialist reviews within 1-3 days
    4. Receive auction estimate if appropriate

    Pros:

    • Expert specialists in many categories
    • Accurate auction estimates
    • No obligation to consign
    • Reputation of major auction house

    Cons:

    • Only interested in items suitable for auction
    • May not respond to lower-value items
    • Focused on their auction categories

    Best For: Items you suspect are valuable and might want to sell at auction.

    3. WorthPoint – Best Database for Research

    Platform: Web Cost: Free trial, then subscription Speed: Instant (self-research) Best For: All categories with maker’s marks

    WorthPoint maintains a massive database of past auction and sale results. You research comparable items yourself rather than receiving an appraisal.

    How It Works:

    1. Search by keywords, maker, or marks
    2. Browse millions of past sales
    3. Find comparable items and their sale prices
    4. Determine value based on comparables

    Pros:

    • Huge database (over 700 million items)
    • Maker’s marks library
    • See actual sale prices, not estimates
    • Great for research

    Cons:

    • Requires subscription after trial
    • You do the research yourself
    • Need to know what you’re looking for

    Best For: Serious collectors who want to research values themselves.

    4. Mearto – Best for Expert Written Appraisals

    Platform: Web Cost: Starting around $15-20 per item (some free options) Speed: 24-48 hours Best For: All categories needing expert opinion

    Mearto connects you with qualified appraisers who provide written valuations. While not entirely free, they occasionally offer promotions and their base prices are reasonable.

    How It Works:

    1. Upload photos and description
    2. Select category
    3. Expert appraiser reviews
    4. Receive written appraisal report

    Pros:

    • Real expert appraisers
    • Written documentation
    • Good for insurance purposes
    • Wide range of categories

    Cons:

    • Not free (though affordable)
    • Takes 24-48 hours

    Best For: When you need documentation or expert opinion.

    5. Kovels – Best Free Price Guide

    Platform: Web Cost: Free (basic) / Subscription (full access) Speed: Instant Best For: Pottery, porcelain, glass, collectibles

    Kovels has been a trusted name in antiques since 1953. Their free online resources include price guides and identification tools.

    How It Works:

    1. Search their free price guide
    2. Browse by category
    3. Find comparable items
    4. Check recent prices

    Pros:

    • Trusted authority since 1953
    • Free basic access
    • Regular updates
    • Good for common collectibles

    Cons:

    • Full database requires subscription
    • Limited free searches
    • Not a personalized appraisal

    Best For: Quick checks on common collectibles.

    6. Reddit Communities – Best Free Human Opinions

    Platform: Reddit Cost: Free Speed: Hours to days Best For: Getting multiple opinions

    Several Reddit communities offer free informal appraisals from knowledgeable collectors and dealers:

    • r/whatsthisworth
    • r/Antiques
    • r/vintage
    • r/Mid_Century

    How It Works:

    1. Post clear photos with any known information
    2. Community members respond with opinions
    3. Often get multiple perspectives
    4. Discussion helps refine understanding

    Pros:

    • Completely free
    • Multiple opinions
    • Active communities
    • Good for unusual items

    Cons:

    • Not professional appraisals
    • Quality varies widely
    • No guarantee of accuracy
    • May take time for responses

    Best For: Unusual items or when you want diverse opinions.

    7. Facebook Groups – Best for Specialized Categories

    Platform: Facebook Cost: Free Speed: Hours to days Best For: Specific collecting categories

    Thousands of Facebook groups focus on specific antique categories. Members often help with identification and informal valuations.

    Popular Groups:

    • Antique Furniture Identification
    • Vintage Pottery and Porcelain
    • Antique Jewelry Identification
    • Mid-Century Modern Collectors

    Pros:

    • Free and accessible
    • Specialized expertise
    • Large communities
    • Often very helpful members

    Cons:

    • Not professional appraisals
    • Must join groups
    • Quality of advice varies

    Best For: Category-specific items where specialized knowledge helps.

    8. Auction House Websites – Best for Researching Comparables

    Platform: Web Cost: Free Speed: Instant (self-research) Best For: All categories

    Major auction houses publish their past results online. Researching these gives you real market data:

    • Christie’s (christies.com)
    • Sotheby’s (sothebys.com)
    • Bonhams (bonhams.com)
    • Skinner (skinnerinc.com)
    • Leslie Hindman (hindmanauctions.com)

    How It Works:

    1. Search past auction results
    2. Find similar items
    3. Note hammer prices
    4. Adjust for your item’s condition

    Pros:

    • Real sale prices
    • High-quality items documented
    • Free access to results
    • Photos help with comparison

    Cons:

    • Requires research skills
    • May not find exact comparables
    • Auction prices can vary from retail

    Best For: Researching valuable items before seeking formal appraisal.

    9. eBay Sold Listings – Best for Common Items

    Platform: Web/App Cost: Free Speed: Instant Best For: Common antiques and collectibles

    eBay’s completed and sold listings show what items actually sold for – not just asking prices.

    How It Works:

    1. Search for your item on eBay
    2. Filter by “Sold Items”
    3. Find comparable pieces
    4. Note actual sale prices

    Pros:

    • Massive database
    • Real transaction prices
    • Very current data
    • Free and easy

    Cons:

    • eBay prices often lower than retail
    • Quality and authenticity varies
    • May not find rare items
    • Condition descriptions inconsistent

    Best For: Common antiques and collectibles, getting baseline values.

    10. Local Auction House Estimates – Best for Selling

    Platform: In-person or email Cost: Usually free Speed: Varies Best For: Items you want to sell

    Local and regional auction houses often provide free estimates for items you might consign. This is technically “free” because they hope to earn your business.

    How to Find Local Auction Houses:

    1. Search “antique auction [your city]”
    2. Check for estate auction companies
    3. Look for specialists in your item type

    Pros:

    • Expert in-person examination possible
    • Free if you might consign
    • Local market knowledge
    • Can lead directly to sale

    Cons:

    • Must have items suitable for auction
    • May require bringing items to them
    • Only free if they want to sell it

    Best For: When you’re ready to sell.

    How to Get the Most Accurate Online Appraisal

    Regardless of which service you use, follow these tips for better results:

    Take Better Photos

    The quality of your photos directly affects appraisal accuracy:

    Essential Photos:

    1. Overall front view – straight on, well-lit
    2. Back view – shows construction, labels
    3. Top view – especially for tables
    4. Bottom/underside – often has marks, labels
    5. Close-up of marks – maker’s stamps, signatures
    6. Detail shots – carving, hardware, damage
    7. Scale reference – include ruler or common object

    Photo Tips:

    • Use natural daylight when possible
    • Avoid flash (creates glare)
    • Shoot against plain background
    • Keep camera steady (use tripod or prop)
    • Clean the item first (but don’t polish patina away)

    Provide Complete Information

    Include everything you know:

    • Where you acquired it
    • Any provenance or history
    • Measurements (height, width, depth)
    • Materials (wood type, metal, etc.)
    • Condition issues (damage, repairs, wear)
    • Any marks, labels, or signatures found

    Understand the Limitations

    Online appraisals have inherent limitations:

    What Online Appraisals CAN Do:

    • Provide estimated value ranges
    • Identify style and period
    • Suggest comparable sales
    • Screen items for further research
    • Satisfy general curiosity

    What Online Appraisals CANNOT Do:

    • Guarantee authenticity (without physical examination)
    • Provide legally binding valuations
    • Replace certified appraisals for insurance
    • Catch all fakes and reproductions
    • Account for local market variations

    Get Multiple Opinions

    For important items, don’t rely on just one source:

    1. Start with AI tools like Antique Identifier for instant preliminary assessment
    2. Research comparables on eBay and auction sites
    3. Post to relevant Reddit or Facebook groups
    4. Consider paid expert appraisal if value warrants

    Types of Antique Appraisals Explained

    Understanding appraisal types helps you choose the right service:

    Insurance Appraisals

    Purpose: Establish replacement value for insurance coverage Value Type: Retail replacement value (highest) Requirements: Often requires certified appraiser Online Options: Limited – usually need formal documentation

    Fair Market Value Appraisals

    Purpose: Determine likely selling price Value Type: What a willing buyer would pay a willing seller Requirements: Less formal than insurance Online Options: Most online services provide this

    Liquidation Appraisals

    Purpose: Quick sale value Value Type: Lowest – what you’d get selling quickly Requirements: Minimal Online Options: eBay sold listings approximate this

    Estate Appraisals

    Purpose: Tax and distribution purposes Value Type: Fair market value at time of death Requirements: May need certified appraiser for IRS Online Options: Can provide preliminary estimates

    When to Pay for a Professional Appraisal

    Free online appraisals are great for many situations, but sometimes paying for professional service makes sense:

    Pay for Professional Appraisal When:

    • Item appears to be worth over $5,000
    • You need documentation for insurance
    • Legal or tax purposes require certified appraisal
    • Authentication is crucial
    • Selling through major auction house
    • Item is extremely rare or unusual

    Cost of Professional Appraisals:

    • Written appraisals: $25-150 per item
    • Certified appraisals: $100-300+ per hour
    • Major auction house consignment: Usually free (they earn commission)

    Red Flags: Avoiding Appraisal Scams

    Unfortunately, some “appraisal” services are scams. Watch for:

    Warning Signs:

    • Promises of extremely high values
    • Pressure to sell immediately
    • Request for upfront fees to “sell” your item
    • Claims they have a buyer waiting
    • Unsolicited contacts about your antiques
    • No verifiable credentials or reviews

    Legitimate Services:

    • Clear about their methodology
    • Provide realistic value ranges
    • No pressure tactics
    • Transparent about fees
    • Verifiable reputation and reviews

    Building Your Own Appraisal Skills

    The more you learn about antiques, the better you can evaluate appraisals you receive:

    Develop Your Eye:

    • Visit museums and study authenticated pieces
    • Attend auction previews and note estimates vs. results
    • Read price guides and auction catalogs
    • Join collector groups and learn from others

    Use Technology:

    • Apps like Antique Identifier help train your eye
    • Research comparable sales regularly
    • Build reference library of images

    Track the Market:

    • Prices fluctuate with trends and economy
    • What sold for $1,000 five years ago might be $500 or $2,000 today
    • Stay current with your areas of interest

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Are free online antique appraisals accurate?

    Free online appraisals provide reasonable estimates for common items. Accuracy improves when you:

    • Provide clear photos and complete information
    • Use multiple services and compare results
    • Understand that all appraisals are estimates

    For high-value or rare items, professional appraisal is recommended.

    Can I get a free appraisal for insurance purposes?

    Most insurance companies require formal written appraisals from certified professionals. Free online estimates typically don’t meet insurance documentation requirements. However, free estimates can help you decide if an item is valuable enough to warrant paying for formal appraisal.

    What’s the best free antique appraisal app?

    For instant AI-powered identification and valuation, the Antique Identifier app offers a free trial and provides quick results. For research-based valuation, combining eBay sold listings with auction house databases gives good results at no cost.

    How do I know if my antique is valuable?

    Signs of potentially valuable antiques include:

    • Quality craftsmanship and materials
    • Maker’s marks or signatures from known craftsmen
    • Original condition with natural patina
    • Rare forms or unusual features
    • Historical significance or provenance
    • Age (genuine period pieces vs. reproductions)

    Should I clean my antique before getting it appraised?

    Generally, NO. Cleaning can:

    • Remove valuable patina
    • Damage delicate surfaces
    • Reduce value significantly

    Light dusting is fine, but avoid polishing, scrubbing, or using any chemicals. Let the appraiser see the item as-is.

    Conclusion

    Getting a free online antique appraisal has never been easier. From AI-powered apps that give instant results to expert communities that share their knowledge freely, you have many options to learn what your antiques might be worth.

    For most situations, start with quick tools like the Antique Identifier app for instant preliminary assessment, then research comparables on eBay and auction sites. For items that appear valuable, invest in professional appraisal before making major decisions.

    Remember that all appraisals are estimates, and actual sale prices depend on finding the right buyer at the right time. Use online appraisals as guides, not guarantees, and you’ll make better decisions about your antiques.

    Happy appraising!

Download Antique Identifier App
Scan to Download
Identify antiques instantly with AI
★★★★★ FREE
🔍 IDENTIFY NOW 🔍 IDENTIFY NOW