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SELLING GOLD & GETTING
A CUSTOM RING MADE:
IS IT POSSIBLE?
If you have old gold jewellery that you no longer wear, you may be considering two questions: Can you sell the gold? And can you then use the proceeds (or the gold itself) to make a custom ring? The short answer is yes but there are important factors to understand so you approach it wisely. Let’s walk through the process, step by step.
1. Why you might want to sell your gold
If you have gold items – old chains, rings, bracelets, perhaps heirlooms, selling them can be a practical way to unlock value:
- Gold prices are relatively high at the moment so the “scrap” gold from jewellery may be worth more than you expect.
- You might not wear the items anymore; perhaps the style is dated, the fit wrong, or they carry memories you’d rather move on from.
- If your goal is to commission something new and personal e.g., a custom ring using recycled gold can be both cost-effective and more meaningful.
So yes: selling gold is a viable starting point for making space (financial or literal) for something new.
2. How to value your gold before selling
Before you approach a buyer, you’ll want to have a realistic idea of what your gold might be worth. In the UK, the key factors are:
- Purity (carat) of the gold: Common, modern jewellery purities are 9ct (37.5% gold), 18ct (75%)
- Weight of the gold in grams.
- The current spot price of gold per gram for that purity
Things to check.
- Hallmarks or stamps on your pieces indicating purity (375 = 9ct, 750 = 18ct
- Are there gemstones, brand names or provenance? These can raise value beyond the ‘scrap gold price’.
- Get multiple quotes and check what the breakdown is: how much for weight / purity vs how much for design / gemstone value.
3. Selling your gold: practical steps & things to watch
When you’re ready to sell, here’s how to proceed and what pitfalls to avoid.
Practical steps
- Weigh and check your items: Use accurate scales if possible or ask a dealer to weigh in front of you.
- Check purity: Find any carat/hallmark marks. If missing, ask the buyer how they will test.
- Compare buyers: High-street gold buyers, online “sell your gold” services and specialist jewellery buyers all have different rates. Some pay more for items with design/brand value rather than just scrap weight.
- Ask for a written breakdown: The weight, carat, price per gram and deductions/refining cost.
- Secure payment and verification: Ensure the buyer is reputable by researching them and checking out reviews. Some businesses offer instant bank transfer or same-day payment.
Things to watch.
- Offers can vary, get 2 or 3 quotes.
- If the gold is mixed with gemstones or brand marks, its value may not just be in its metal weight. The buyer might assume you are only interested in scrap, not the collector’s value.
- Don’t confuse retail value with what you’ll get when selling.
- Understand tax or legal implications: while typical private jewellery sales don’t always carry VAT or CGT, if you’re frequently selling as a business then tax rules may apply.
4. Then: making a custom ring
Now, assuming you’ve sold your gold or are re-using your gold, can you commission a custom ring? Absolutely and many jewellers offer a “melt & make” or bespoke service.
Re-using your gold.
Some jewellers will melt down your existing gold and reuse it in the new piece. This gives sentimental value (your old jewellery gone but memory retained) and may reduce the amount of new gold you need to buy.
When you reuse your gold:
- You reduce cost of raw material as you provide part of it.
- You keep sentimental material (heirloom ring becomes new design).
- Ensure the jeweller confirms purity and the process so you know what you’ve got.
Commissioning bespoke jewellery
The bespoke process typically runs like this:
- Initial consultation: you discuss your design ideas, budget, materials with the jeweller.
- Design & quote: the jeweller draws up the ring design (sometimes CAD), selects materials, gives you cost and timing.
- Confirmation & payment: often a deposit is required before making begins.
- Fabrication: gold is melted/cast, ring is formed, set with gemstones if desired, finished and polished.
- Delivery & final payment: you receive the custom ring.
What you should budget & check
- Materials: gold carat (9ct, 14ct, 18ct), gemstones, setting labour.
- Design complexity: unique shapes, engravings, unusual stones cost more.
- Lead time: bespoke rings take time, weeks, sometimes several.
- Re-using gold may save money but custom work still has labour and setting costs along with usually needing to add further precious metal.
- Ensure clarity on warranty and aftercare service.
5. Can you combine the two: sell gold then get a custom ring?
Yes, but with some caveats. If you sell your gold first, you’ll have cash to go toward your custom ring. If you reuse your gold directly, you’ll need jeweller support for process. Here are some practical considerations:
- Timing: Selling your gold first gives you a clear budget and cash to invest in a new or custom piece. However, once you have sold your item for the gold scrap price, it is very unlikely that you can get this back to use in the making of you custom ring.
- Budgeting: Know how much you’re likely to get from sale, and then how much your custom ring will cost, so you avoid a situation where sale proceeds don’t cover what you want.
- Matching value: If your gold item has brand or sentimental value beyond its melt value, selling it might lose more value than you anticipate. In that case maybe repurposing the gold is wiser.
- Jeweller choice: Choose a jeweller who can either buy your gold or accept your gold for reuse and carry out bespoke work. That way you streamline the process and maybe save on delays.
- Sentiment vs cash: If you’re emotionally attached, reconsider whether selling is right. If the aim is to carry forward the memory into a new design, redesign or melting your original item to use in a new piece may serve you better.
6. Key things to check & final tips
Here are some final pointers to make sure you do this well:
- Get at least two independent valuations of your gold before selling.
- Make sure you ask the buyer for a breakdown of how they arrived at the figure (weight × carat × rate minus costs).
- Check reputations: look for jewellers or gold buyers with good reviews, transparency, proper licensing or trade association membership.
- When commissioning the custom ring: ask for design visuals (sketches or CAD), timeline, materials breakdown, and deposit/ payment schedule.
- Ask about resizing, warranty and aftercare for your new ring: custom work often still has future servicing requirements.
- If you reuse your gold, check whether the process affects any warranty, hallmarking, or returns of old components.
- Factor in the extra cost of labour, design, finishing, don’t assume the old gold will cover everything.
- Remember: sale value and sentimental value are rarely the same. Just because something cost £X new doesn’t mean you’ll get £X when you sell.
- Be aware of potential tax or regulatory issues if you are doing this as part of a business or frequently selling. Talk to a tax advisor if unsure.
7. Conclusion
In short: yes, it is possible to sell your gold and then get a custom ring made but doing it well means understanding the market for gold, knowing how valuations work, choosing trusted partners, and planning the custom jewellery piece carefully.
If you go in informed, you can convert old gold you were no longer wearing into something fresh, personal and meaningful whether that’s by selling the item for cash then applying this to a new ring, or by re-working the gold itself into the custom design.
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