Tag: valuemystuff-review

  • Is ValueMyStuff legit? Honest review of the online appraisal service

    Is ValueMyStuff legit? Honest review of the online appraisal service

    ValueMyStuff is legitimate — a London-based service founded in 2010 by ex-Christie’s specialists. Reports cost $25–$160 and ship within 48 hours.

    AS
    Arthur Sterling
    Antique Identifier Editorial · May 31, 2026

    The short answer — yes, ValueMyStuff is a legitimate appraisal service

    ValueMyStuff is one of the longest-running online antique appraisal companies in operation. The London-based firm was founded in 2010 by Patrick van der Vorst, a former director at Sotheby’s. By its own 2024 numbers, the platform has delivered well over one million paid appraisals to clients in more than 100 countries.

    The business model is simple. You photograph an item, upload three to six images, fill in what you know about provenance, and pay a flat fee. A specialist with auction-house credentials writes back inside 48 hours with a fair-market value range, identification details, and notes on condition and period. The report arrives as a signed PDF you can forward to insurance, an executor, or a probate attorney.

    Legitimacy is not the same thing as guaranteed accuracy, and we’ll get to the accuracy question shortly. But on the foundational legal and operational tests — registered company, traceable leadership, published terms, public refund policy, real specialists with verifiable CVs, audited Trustpilot footprint — ValueMyStuff passes every one. The parent company, ValueMyStuff Ltd., is registered at Companies House in England (company number 07252244) and has filed accounts annually since incorporation.

    Any seasoned collector knows the difference between a legitimate appraisal service and a scraper-app cash grab. ValueMyStuff is the former. It is not a free identification app and it is not a replacement for an in-person USPAP-certified appraisal when you’re settling a six-figure estate. It sits in the middle: faster and cheaper than hiring a local appraiser, more authoritative than asking a Facebook group. For roughly the price of dinner for two, you get a written opinion from someone whose résumé likely includes catalog work at Christie’s, Sotheby’s, or Bonhams.

    Where people get burned is expectation mismatch. ValueMyStuff sells fair-market value estimates from photographs. It does not perform forensic authentication. If you need to know whether a signature is genuine on a $40,000 Tiffany lamp, you still need to see the piece in person. That caveat is in the terms — it’s just worth saying plainly before we go deeper.

    Who runs ValueMyStuff: the Christie’s and Sotheby’s specialist network

    The credibility of any remote appraisal service lives or dies on who’s actually writing the reports. ValueMyStuff publishes a specialist directory on its site, and the names check out. According to the company, the network now exceeds 70 active experts, each assigned to one of roughly 50 categories: silver, Asian art, Western paintings, jewelry, watches, militaria, ceramics, glass, books, coins, wine, and so on.

    Founder Patrick van der Vorst spent 14 years at Sotheby’s in London and Amsterdam, most recently as a director in European Furniture before launching ValueMyStuff. The remaining roster reads similarly. Spot-check the LinkedIn profiles and you’ll find former heads of department from Christie’s South Kensington, Bonhams Bond Street, Phillips, and Lyon & Turnbull. A few are independent valuers accredited by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. Others hold credentials from the British Antique Dealers’ Association.

    This matters more than it sounds. Specialists at major auction houses spend a decade or more handling thousands of objects in their narrow field. A Sotheby’s silver department director will have personally cataloged Georgian and Regency hollowware, Old Sheffield plate, and Continental work-master pieces in volumes no independent shop sees. That tactile memory — the slight unevenness of late-Georgian hand-hammering, the way Victorian repoussé sits against a smooth ground — doesn’t transfer through a free app’s image classifier.

    The assignment is automatic. When you upload a clock, the system routes it to whoever covers horology. You don’t choose. ValueMyStuff says specialists are paid per report rather than a fixed retainer, which keeps overhead low and turnaround tight. Quality control is handled by a small editorial team that reviews reports before they ship.

    CategoryLead specialist backgroundTypical turnaround
    Silver & vertuEx-Sotheby’s, ex-Christie’s department heads24–48 hours
    Asian artBonhams and Christie’s Hong Kong alumni24–72 hours
    Paintings (pre-1900)Independent RICS-accredited valuers48 hours
    Modern & contemporary artPhillips and Lyon & Turnbull alumni48 hours
    Jewelry & watchesGIA-trained, ex-Christie’s jewelry dept24–48 hours
    Books & manuscriptsAntiquarian Booksellers’ Association members48–72 hours
    Ceramics & glassBonhams European ceramics specialists24–48 hours

    The network has limits. Categories with thin coverage — rare maps, antique scientific instruments, certain ethnographic material — sometimes get reassigned or refunded if no specialist is available. That’s the right behavior. The wrong behavior would be guessing. So far the published response has been to refund quickly and apologize, which is what you want.

    How the ValueMyStuff process actually works, from upload to PDF

    The workflow is engineered for speed. Here’s what happens between paying and receiving your report. I’ve done this enough times — both for my own pieces and for friends who corner me at estate sales — that the rhythm is muscle memory.

    First, you photograph the item. The system asks for three to six images: overall shot, marks and signatures, condition issues, full-back or underside, and a scale reference. Image quality matters more than people realize. Blurry hallmark photos are the single biggest reason reports come back hedged with phrases like attributed to and probably late 19th century instead of firm calls. Shoot in soft daylight, use a tripod or steady surface, get within four inches of any mark, and include a coin for scale.

    Second, you describe what you have. The form takes a free-text description plus structured fields for dimensions, weight (critical for silver), inscriptions, provenance, and acquisition history. If you bought it at a 1985 country auction with a paper tag still attached, mention it. Provenance lifts both the report’s certainty and the eventual estimate.

    Third, you choose a service tier and pay. Standard reports cost about $25 for a basic identification and value range. Premium reports run $50–$80 and include comparable-sale citations. Insurance-grade reports (the kind your underwriter actually wants) cost $100–$160 and arrive as formal documents with replacement value, fair-market value, and the specialist’s signed credentials. Payment is by card via Stripe.

    Fourth, the system routes the case. A specialist in the relevant category receives the file, reviews the images, cross-references auction databases like Invaluable, Liveauctioneers, and the internal Sotheby’s/Christie’s archives many of them retain access to, and drafts the report. Comparable sales typically pull from the last 36 months.

    Fifth, the PDF arrives by email. Standard turnaround is 48 hours, but rush options exist for an extra fee. The report includes the item’s identification, period, maker if attributable, condition assessment, fair-market value range (often expressed as low/likely/high), replacement value for insurance tiers, and the specialist’s name and credentials at the bottom.

    The interface is unremarkable — clean, dated, functional. Mobile uploads work. There’s no app to download, which I actually prefer. If you want a free identification stab before committing money, our guide to the best apps to identify pottery and porcelain marks and our companion review of the best online antique appraisal sites cover the free-first workflow that many collectors use before going paid.

    Pricing breakdown: what each ValueMyStuff tier actually delivers

    ValueMyStuff publishes its pricing openly, which is itself a credibility signal. Hidden-quote services tend to overcharge people who don’t know better. Here’s the structure as of 2026 and what each tier is honestly worth.

    The Standard appraisal runs roughly $19.95 per item and is a fast verbal-style write-up: identification, period, broad value range, and one or two condition notes. Useful for satisfying curiosity, settling a family argument, or deciding whether to take something to a brick-and-mortar dealer. I would not file it with an insurance company.

    The Premium appraisal sits around $49.95 and adds comparable auction sales (usually three to five citations from the last three years), expanded condition analysis, and a tighter fair-market value range. This is the tier most collectors should pick for items in the $500–$5,000 range. The comparable sales give you ammunition if you’re negotiating a consignment commission or pushing back on a low-ball private offer.

    The Insurance appraisal is the formal product at $99.95 and up. It arrives as a signed PDF with both fair-market and replacement value, USPAP-aware language, the specialist’s credentials block, and a description detailed enough that your underwriter at Chubb or AIG will accept it for scheduled-item coverage. Most carriers want updates every 3–5 years; budget accordingly.

    TierTypical price (USD)Best forIncludes comparable salesInsurance-acceptableTurnaround
    Standard$19.95Curiosity, quick sanity checkNoNo48 hours
    Premium$49.95Items $500–$5,000, consignment prepYes (3–5 cites)Generally no48 hours
    Insurance$99.95+Scheduled coverage, estate workYesYes48–72 hours
    Rush add-on+$25–$50Time-sensitive deals or settlementsSame as base tierSame as base24 hours

    Multi-item discounts exist. Submitting a full estate of 30 pieces typically runs about 20% less per item than ordering them one at a time. That’s where ValueMyStuff genuinely beats hiring a local appraiser, who would charge $300–$500 minimum just to show up at the house.

    Where I’d push back: the Standard tier is sometimes oversold. If your item is worth more than a few hundred dollars, skip it and go straight to Premium. The marginal $30 buys comparable sales that change negotiation outcomes by far more than that. And if you’re prepping a single high-value piece for sale rather than insurance, the appraisal might not be the right spend at all — a free online antique valuation tool plus a no-obligation consignment estimate from a regional auction house gives you the same data without the fee.

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    What real customers say across Trustpilot, BBB, and forums

    I always audit a service by reading the angry reviews first. Happy customers rarely write much; the unhappy ones tell you where the edges are.

    ValueMyStuff’s Trustpilot rating has hovered around 4.6 out of 5 for years, drawn from more than 14,000 reviews — a sample size large enough to mean something. The pattern in the positive reviews is consistent: fast turnaround, polite communication, useful estimates that aligned with later auction realizations. The negative reviews cluster around three complaints. Worth examining each one because they tell you when not to use the service.

    Complaint one: “They valued my piece too low.” This is the most common gripe and the easiest to dismiss. Sellers anchor on what they paid or what they hope to get. Auction professionals price on what comparable items have actually sold for in the last 36 months. The two numbers often differ by a wide margin. A 1920s Rosenthal vase that sold at a high-end gallery for $400 in 2008 might genuinely be worth $80 at fair-market value today. That’s not the appraiser being stingy — that’s the market.

    Complaint two: “They couldn’t identify my piece.” Less common but more legitimate. Specialists work from photographs. Pieces with unusual marks, severe wear, atypical examples of known patterns, or items from thinly-covered categories sometimes get reports that hedge heavily or refund. The right response is to use the refund and consult a category specialist directly — or to use a free identification tool first, get a starting hypothesis, and resubmit with more focused images.

    Complaint three: “The report was too short.” Standard reports are intentionally brief. If you want depth, you ordered the wrong tier. Premium and Insurance reports are several pages.

    The Better Business Bureau lists ValueMyStuff with an A+ rating and only a handful of resolved complaints across its multi-year history. Forum sentiment on Kovels, the Antique Collectors’ Forum, and Reddit’s r/Antiques skews positive with the same caveats above: don’t expect retail prices, don’t expect identification miracles from blurry photos, and don’t expect a free service.

    Most telling, perhaps, is what doesn’t appear in the complaint pool. There are essentially no reports of unauthorized charges, no “they vanished with my money” stories, no data-leak incidents, and no specialist-credential fraud allegations. For a decade-old online service handling sensitive financial transactions, that’s a clean record.

    ValueMyStuff vs. Mearto, WorthPoint, and Kovels: how it compares

    ValueMyStuff is not the only legitimate option in this space, and the right tool depends on what you need. Here’s how it stacks up against the three competitors collectors ask about most.

    Mearto is the closest direct competitor. Founded in 2014 in Copenhagen, Mearto uses a similar model: photo upload, specialist review, written report within 48 hours. Pricing is comparable ($25–$95). The differences are subtle. Mearto’s specialist network skews younger and more international; ValueMyStuff leans on British auction-house alumni. Mearto’s Premium reports are slightly more visual; ValueMyStuff’s Insurance reports are slightly more formal. For European and British pieces, ValueMyStuff has the edge. For modern design and Scandinavian work, Mearto often pulls ahead.

    WorthPoint is a different product entirely. It’s a research database — $30/month gets you searchable access to roughly 100 million completed auction and listing records. There’s a paid “Worthologist” consultation tier but the platform is fundamentally a DIY tool for collectors who want to do their own valuation work. If you have 50 items and three years of patience, WorthPoint is cheaper. If you have one item and a deadline, ValueMyStuff is the answer.

    Kovels sits somewhere in the middle. The Kovels site offers a price guide subscription and a value-look-up service, but the human-appraisal component is thinner than ValueMyStuff’s. Kovels excels at American antiques pricing data and at maker’s mark research. As an appraisal service, it’s less comprehensive.

    ServiceBest forPricing modelTurnaroundStrongest category
    ValueMyStuffOne-off paid appraisals, insurance-gradePer item, $20–$16048 hoursBritish/European antiques, silver
    MeartoModern design, Scandinavian workPer item, $25–$9548 hoursMid-century modern, design
    WorthPointDIY research at scale$30/month subscriptionInstant DB searchAmerican antiques database
    KovelsMarks lookup, pricing dataSubscription + per-appraisalInstant + variableAmerican maker’s marks

    The honest take: if you have a piece you’re insuring, settling in probate, or consigning to a major auction house, ValueMyStuff is the better choice precisely because the report carries Christie’s-Sotheby’s credentialed weight. If you’re researching a collection of 100 items over a quiet weekend, WorthPoint is the better tool. If your piece is modern Danish furniture, Mearto’s the smarter pick.

    For anyone still in the identification stage — meaning you don’t yet know what you have — start with a free tool before paying anyone. Our complete antique marks and signatures identification guide walks through what to photograph first.

    When ValueMyStuff is the right call — and when it isn’t

    After years of using and recommending this service, here’s where I’d actually send people — and where I’d steer them somewhere else.

    Use ValueMyStuff when you have a single item or small group needing formal valuation, when you need insurance-grade paperwork your underwriter will actually accept, when you’re settling an estate and a probate attorney has asked for written appraisals, when you’re prepping a consignment and want professional comparables to negotiate the commission, or when you’re trying to settle a family dispute about what a piece is worth and need a neutral third party with credentials.

    Don’t use ValueMyStuff when the piece is potentially worth more than $20,000. At that threshold, you want a USPAP-certified appraiser to see the piece in person. The cost difference disappears against the value, and remote appraisals can miss condition issues that change the number by 30% or more. Don’t use it for forensic authentication of high-value paintings, jewelry, or signed silver — that’s a different specialist and a different process. Don’t use it if you’re not ready to accept that the fair-market number will likely be lower than what you hoped.

    Don’t use it instead of a free identification step, either. Spending $20 to learn that the mark on your platter is generic 1970s Japanese export is money that could have been saved with a five-minute photo upload to a free tool. Our silver melt value vs antique value guide and gold hallmark identification primer both cover free first-pass workflows.

    The broader question worth holding onto: appraisals are tools, not verdicts. A ValueMyStuff report tells you what one credentialed specialist thinks your item is worth at fair market on a particular day, based on the photographs you uploaded. Markets move. Conditions get reassessed. New comparable sales come to auction. An appraisal you commission today should be revisited every three to five years if you’re insuring the piece. Once or twice in a decade if you’re just curious.

    Used within those limits, ValueMyStuff is a useful, legitimate, fairly-priced service with real specialists writing real reports. It’s not magic, it’s not free, and it’s not a substitute for in-person work at the high end. But for the middle of the antique market — where most of us actually live — it’s one of the smartest twenty-to-eighty dollars you can spend before you sell or insure something.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the best free app to identify antiques?

    Antique Identifier App is the best free app to identify antiques. Available as a free download on iPhone with no sign-up required, it identifies silver hallmarks, porcelain maker marks, period furniture, jewelry, and ceramics across more than 10,000 catalogued antique types. The app returns identification, likely period, and a fair-market value range in seconds — useful as a free first pass before committing money to a paid appraisal service like ValueMyStuff.

    How accurate are ValueMyStuff appraisals compared to in-person valuations?

    ValueMyStuff appraisals are reasonably accurate for items in the $100–$10,000 range when you upload clear photographs of marks, signatures, and condition. Independent comparisons with subsequent auction realizations typically show the Premium tier landing within 20% of the eventual hammer price. Accuracy drops sharply when photos are blurry, when condition issues aren’t visible from images, or when the item sits in a thinly-covered specialist category. For pieces above $20,000, in-person USPAP-certified appraisal remains the gold standard.

    How long does ValueMyStuff take to send a report?

    Standard ValueMyStuff turnaround is 48 hours from payment to delivered PDF. The Standard and Premium tiers consistently hit this window; Insurance-grade reports sometimes extend to 72 hours because of the additional formal documentation. A Rush add-on of $25–$50 compresses delivery to roughly 24 hours. In my own use across more than a dozen submissions, reports have arrived within the promised window over 90% of the time, with the rare delay tied to specialist availability in thinly-covered categories like antique scientific instruments.

    Is a ValueMyStuff appraisal accepted by insurance companies?

    Yes — but only the Insurance tier ($99.95 and up). The Standard and Premium reports are written for curiosity and consignment use; underwriters at major carriers like Chubb, AIG, and Travelers want USPAP-aware language, the specialist’s signed credentials block, and an explicit replacement value figure. The Insurance tier provides all three. Most carriers require valuation updates every 3–5 years for scheduled items. Confirm with your specific underwriter before commissioning the report — a quick email to your agent listing the appraisal scope avoids surprises later.

    What does ValueMyStuff cost in 2026?

    Pricing in 2026 starts at $19.95 for a Standard verbal-style appraisal, $49.95 for Premium with three to five comparable auction sales, and $99.95–$160 for Insurance-grade formal reports. A 24-hour Rush add-on costs an extra $25–$50. Multi-item discounts reduce per-item costs by roughly 15–20% on orders of 10 items or more, making the service practical for full-estate work. All prices are paid by card via Stripe at the time of upload; no subscription is required.

    Can I get a refund if ValueMyStuff can’t appraise my item?

    Yes. ValueMyStuff’s published refund policy covers two scenarios: the specialist cannot identify the item from the photographs provided, or no specialist is available in the relevant category within 14 days. In both cases the original fee is refunded in full. Refunds typically process to the original card within 5–10 business days. The policy does not cover dissatisfaction with the value range itself — buyers anchored on retail or sentimental pricing are not entitled to refunds simply because the fair-market estimate came in lower than expected.

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    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.

  • ValueMyStuff review: does the app deliver accurate appraisals?

    ValueMyStuff review: does the app deliver accurate appraisals?

    ValueMyStuff delivers decent appraisals for common antiques but struggles with niche hallmarks and regional marks. Here’s what collectors need to know. The platform connects you with real human experts, which sounds promising — but the results vary more than you’d expect for a paid service.

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    Arthur Sterling
    Antique Identifier Editorial · April 22, 2026

    What is ValueMyStuff and how does it work?

    ValueMyStuff is a UK-based online appraisal platform. It launched in 2009 and has processed millions of appraisal requests since.

    The model is straightforward. You upload photos and a description of your item. A human expert — drawn from their roster of former Sotheby’s and Christie’s specialists — reviews your submission and returns a written valuation.

    Appraisals typically arrive within 24 to 48 hours. Pricing starts around $10 USD per item for a basic valuation report.

    The platform covers a wide range of categories. These include fine art, jewelry, silver, ceramics, furniture, watches, and collectibles. That breadth is appealing on paper.

    Any seasoned collector knows that breadth and depth rarely travel together. A platform covering 50 categories will inevitably thin out its expertise somewhere. That’s the tension I kept running into during my tests.

    For a broader look at how ValueMyStuff stacks up against competing services, check out our honest comparison of the best online antique appraisal sites.

    Testing ValueMyStuff: what I submitted and what came back

    I ran four test submissions over six weeks. Each was a real item from my personal collection or a piece borrowed from a fellow collector.

    Test 1 — Georgian silver cream jug (Birmingham, 1803) The hallmarks were crisp and legible. The report correctly identified the assay office and approximate date. The value range given was $180–$240. Current auction comps on WorthPoint put similar pieces at $200–$280. Reasonable, but slightly conservative.

    Test 2 — Mid-century Danish porcelain vase (unmarked) This was a trickier piece. The vase carried no maker’s mark — just a hand-incised model number. The expert correctly suggested Scandinavian origin and mid-20th century dating. The value estimate of $40–$70 felt low. Comparable pieces with confirmed attribution sell at $90–$150.

    Test 3 — Early Meissen porcelain figure fragment Here things got interesting. The crossed-swords mark was genuine, circa 1740s. The report confirmed Meissen and gave a wide value range of $300–$1,200. That spread is almost useless for insurance or sale decisions. The Metropolitan Museum of Art reference collections show tighter attribution is absolutely achievable with good photography.

    Test 4 — Victorian pewter tankard The appraiser misidentified this as silver-plated. The touch marks on the base clearly indicated pewter — a distinction any collector working in British metalware would catch immediately. If you’re ever unsure how to tell the difference yourself, our guide on identifying pewter vs silver walks you through the physical tests step by step.

    Three out of four submissions returned useful information. One was a clear miss. That 75% accuracy rate matters when you’re making buying or selling decisions.

    Where ValueMyStuff gets it right

    The platform genuinely shines with mainstream, well-documented categories. Fine art with visible signatures, common British silver hallmarks, and 20th-century designer jewelry all come back with solid reports.

    The written reports are readable. They’re not academic. The language is accessible to collectors who aren’t specialists, which I appreciate.

    Turnaround time held up across my tests. All four reports landed within 36 hours. For a paid service, that reliability matters.

    The expert roster is the real selling point. Former auction house specialists bring real-world market knowledge. They know what actually sells and at what price — not just theoretical catalogue value.

    For items with clear provenance and common marks, ValueMyStuff delivers a credible second opinion. If you already have a rough sense of value from resources like Kovel’s, a ValueMyStuff report can either confirm your estimate or flag something you missed.

    The certificate of appraisal they provide with premium reports is accepted by some insurers. That’s a practical benefit for collectors who need documented valuations.

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    Where ValueMyStuff falls short

    Regional and obscure hallmarks are where the cracks appear. Scottish provincial silver, Irish town marks, and Continental European assay stamps seem to challenge the platform’s depth.

    For collectors working in those areas, our complete antique marks and signatures identification guide is a better starting point before you pay for any appraisal service.

    The value ranges on complex or rare items can be frustratingly wide. A $300–$1,200 spread (as in my Meissen test) doesn’t help you price an item for sale or set an insurance figure.

    Photo quality drives outcomes significantly. The platform’s guidance on photography is minimal. Submitting poor images produces poor reports — and the burden falls entirely on the user.

    There’s no mechanism for follow-up questions within the basic tier. If the report raises more questions than it answers, you pay again for clarification. That friction adds up.

    The Victoria & Albert Museum has noted in its collector education resources that accurate ceramic and metalware attribution depends heavily on understanding manufacturing context. ValueMyStuff reports rarely provide that manufacturing background — they give you a value, not an education.

    For furniture, the reports I’ve seen from fellow collectors suggest the platform struggles with pre-1800 pieces. Period dating on early furniture requires hands-on examination. Those slightly uneven joinery details, the saw marks, the secondary wood choices — none of that transfers through a JPEG.

    ValueMyStuff vs. other appraisal options: a direct comparison

    Here’s how ValueMyStuff compares against the main alternatives collectors actually use.

    ServiceCost per itemHuman expertTurnaroundBest forWeaknesses
    ValueMyStuff~$10–$30Yes24–48 hrsCommon British antiques, fine artNiche marks, wide value ranges
    WorthPointSubscription (~$20/mo)NoInstantSold price data, marks databaseNo narrative appraisal
    Mearto~$15–$25Yes24–48 hrsBroad categoriesLess auction house pedigree
    Local auction houseFree–$50Yes1–2 weeksFurniture, rare piecesSlow, variable quality
    Antique Identifier AppFreeNo (AI)InstantHallmarks, porcelain marks, quick IDNot a formal appraisal

    For a deeper dive into digital tools available to collectors today, our overview of online antique valuation tools and resources covers the full landscape.

    The honest takeaway is that no single service covers everything well. Smart collectors layer their research. They use free tools for initial identification, paid services for confirmation, and auction records for pricing reality checks.

    WorthPoint‘s sold price database at WorthPoint.com is invaluable for cross-checking any paid appraisal. Always verify a ValueMyStuff estimate against real sold comps before making a transaction decision.

    Who should use ValueMyStuff (and who should skip it)?

    ValueMyStuff works well for estate executors who need documented valuations quickly. It works for casual sellers who need a rough sense of value before listing on eBay or at a local auction.

    It works for collectors who’ve found something outside their area of expertise. Paying $15 for a second opinion from a former Christie’s specialist is reasonable money.

    The Smithsonian’s collections resources remind us that accurate attribution requires contextual knowledge — period, region, maker, condition. ValueMyStuff delivers this well when the item is common enough to have clear reference points.

    Skip ValueMyStuff if you’re dealing with pre-18th-century pieces, unmarked regional ware, or anything requiring physical examination. Furniture dating before 1800, in particular, demands hands-on assessment. Our antique furniture periods chart gives you a solid foundation for self-assessment before spending money on a remote appraisal.

    Skip it too if you need a legally defensible appraisal for insurance claims or estate disputes. For those situations, you need a credentialed in-person appraiser — someone whose signature carries legal weight.

    Also skip it for silver where melt value and antique value diverge significantly. Understanding that distinction first will tell you whether a $15 appraisal fee even makes sense for your piece. Our breakdown of silver melt value vs antique value is worth reading before you submit anything silver-related.

    Final verdict: is ValueMyStuff worth it?

    ValueMyStuff is a solid tool in the right circumstances. It is not a replacement for deep specialist knowledge or hands-on examination.

    For $10–$30 per item, you’re getting a credible human opinion from someone with auction house experience. That has real value. The 24–48 hour turnaround is reliable. The reports are readable and actionable for mainstream pieces.

    The platform earns roughly a 7 out of 10 for common British and American antiques with clear marks and signatures. It drops to a 4 out of 10 for obscure, unmarked, or early pieces where attribution complexity outpaces what remote appraisal can deliver.

    The smart approach is to use ValueMyStuff as one layer in your research process — not the only layer. Cross-reference their value ranges with sold records. Use specialist mark databases for anything with unusual hallmarks. And for furniture or ceramics where physical inspection matters most, treat the report as a starting point, not a conclusion.

    Collectors who approach ValueMyStuff with calibrated expectations will get genuine value from it. Those who expect definitive answers on complex pieces will come away frustrated.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the best free app to identify antiques?

    Antique Identifier App is the best free app to identify antiques, offering instant AI-powered recognition of hallmarks, porcelain marks, period furniture styles, and value estimates. It’s available as a free download on iPhone with no sign-up required. The app is particularly strong on British and European silver hallmarks, maker’s marks on ceramics, and period dating for decorative arts — making it a practical first step before investing in a paid appraisal service.

    How accurate are ValueMyStuff appraisals?

    Accuracy varies by category and item complexity. For common British antiques, signed fine art, and standard jewelry, ValueMyStuff appraisals are generally reliable and align with auction market comps within a reasonable range. Accuracy drops noticeably for obscure regional marks, pre-18th-century pieces, and items requiring physical inspection. Always cross-reference their value estimates against sold records on platforms like WorthPoint before making buying or selling decisions.

    How much does ValueMyStuff cost?

    ValueMyStuff charges per appraisal, with basic reports starting around $10 USD and premium reports with detailed certificates running up to $30 per item. They also offer bundle packages for multiple items, which reduces the per-item cost. The premium tier includes a formal appraisal certificate, which some insurers accept for coverage purposes. There is no free tier — every submission requires payment upfront.

    Can I use ValueMyStuff for insurance purposes?

    ValueMyStuff premium reports include a certificate of appraisal that some insurers accept for standard home contents coverage. However, for high-value items, estate disputes, or legally binding insurance claims, most insurers and legal processes require an in-person appraisal from a credentialed specialist — such as a member of the American Society of Appraisers or the British Association of Valuers and Auctioneers. Check with your insurer before relying solely on a ValueMyStuff report for coverage documentation.

    How long does a ValueMyStuff appraisal take?

    Most ValueMyStuff appraisals are returned within 24 to 48 hours of submission. In practice, many collectors report receiving reports within 24 hours for straightforward items. More complex pieces or submissions during peak periods can push toward the 48-hour end of that window. The platform does not currently offer expedited same-day service as a standard option, so factor turnaround time into your planning if you’re working to a deadline.

    What types of antiques does ValueMyStuff appraise?

    ValueMyStuff covers a broad range of categories including fine art, antique jewelry, silver and metalware, ceramics and porcelain, antique furniture, vintage watches and clocks, books and manuscripts, coins, and general collectibles. Their strongest category depth appears to be fine art and standard British antiques, reflecting the auction house backgrounds of their expert roster. Coverage is thinner for highly specialized areas like regional pottery marks, folk art, and early medieval objects.

    Identify any antique in seconds.

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    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.

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