What to keep and what to sell — a decision framework
The keep-or-sell decision is rarely purely financial. For working photographers, it involves asking honestly which equipment still serves a purpose. For families managing an estate, it involves separating sentimental attachment from practical considerations about what the new home can accommodate.
A useful starting point is to divide the collection into three categories: items you have used in the last two years, items you intend to use in the next two years, and everything else. That third category is where the decision becomes interesting. Some of it will have genuine market value. Some will be sentimental but impractical to keep. Some will be neither particularly valuable nor emotionally significant — and that is the clearest case for selling.
The risk with a looming move is making decisions under pressure that you later regret. A specialist estimate costs nothing and provides useful information before any irreversible decisions are made. Knowing what something is worth does not oblige you to sell it — but it prevents you from discarding it uninformed.
The keep-or-sell decision at a glance
| Factor | Keep if… | Consider selling if… |
|---|---|---|
| Active use | Used regularly or a specific future project planned | Not used in two or more years with no clear plan |
| Sentimental value | Strong personal connection and space exists for storage | Attachment is modest and new home has limited space |
| Condition | Good working order; well stored in cases | Deteriorating in storage; seals perishing, fungus developing |
| Duplicates | Each item has a distinct purpose or role | Multiple bodies of the same model with no reason to keep both |
| Original accessories | Complete sets with original cases and documentation | Incomplete, mixed-provenance accessories with no clear pairing |
| Monetary value | Value is modest; item has other reasons to keep it | Significant value that would make a meaningful practical difference |
Before your move — camera collection preparation steps
- Photograph every camera body, lens and significant accessory before anything is moved or packed
- Note serial numbers where visible — these help establish model variants and age
- Keep cameras with any cases, straps and lens caps that belong to them
- Set aside original boxes and packaging separately — do not discard before an assessment
- Do not clean cameras, lenses or accessories before a specialist has seen them
- Separate items you are certain you want to keep from those you are undecided about
- Contact a specialist buyer with photographs before your moving date if at all possible
- Make a note of any items you believe may have been purchased new and were a significant investment at the time
If you are moving to a smaller property, storage conditions matter as much as space. Camera equipment kept in damp or humid conditions will deteriorate. If you cannot guarantee appropriate storage in the new home, selling before the move is often the better outcome for the equipment itself.
Handling a deceased relative's camera collection during a move
Clearing a family home after bereavement while simultaneously preparing a move is among the most emotionally taxing things a person can be asked to do. Camera equipment often represents a significant part of a relative's identity — particularly if they were an enthusiastic photographer — and decisions about it can carry more emotional weight than their monetary value warrants.
It helps to give yourself permission to take time on these decisions. A specialist postal buyer does not require you to bring items anywhere in person, and the process can happen around your other commitments. You do not need to have everything sorted before making contact.
Where a collection was clearly curated with care — cameras stored in individual cases, lenses capped and bagged, instruction books filed — it is worth treating it as a collection rather than as individual items. That care often reflects investment and knowledge on the part of the original owner, and a specialist buyer will recognise it accordingly.
For more on navigating an inherited collection, see our dedicated page on downsizing a camera collection and our guide to working with vintage camera collection buyers.
Common mistakes when downsizing under time pressure
Moving deadlines create a particular kind of pressure that leads to avoidable errors. The most common ones are:
- Discarding items as part of a general clear-out. Camera equipment that ends up in a skip or a charity box is often equipment that had genuine value. A five-minute photograph and a quick estimate prevents this.
- Selling to the first buyer who responds. Speed is understandable under time pressure, but a general auction or online marketplace listing will rarely achieve what a specialist assessment would. An overnight response from a specialist buyer is usually faster than waiting for auction proceeds anyway.
- Separating sets during packing. A matched set of camera, lenses and accessories in original cases packed into separate removal boxes is a matched set that may never be reunited. Keep collections together until after an assessment.
- Assuming age alone determines value. A 1970s camera is not necessarily more valuable than a 1990s one. Model, condition and completeness matter far more than age. Do not pre-sort by year without specialist input.
Frequently asked questions
How long does the selling process take when I have a moving deadline?
Fair Vintage aims to provide an estimate within one working day of receiving photographs and a description. Once an estimate is accepted, we send packaging materials promptly and can usually complete the full process — from first contact to payment — within one to two weeks. If you have a specific moving date, let us know at the outset and we will do our best to work around it.
What if I do not know which cameras belonged to a deceased relative versus my own?
This is more common than you might expect. If provenance is genuinely mixed, describe what you know and what is uncertain. A specialist buyer will assess the items on their own merits regardless of ownership history. You are not expected to have complete records, particularly in estate situations.
Can I get an estimate before I have packed everything up?
Yes — in fact, this is the preferred approach. Photographs taken in situ, before packing, often capture context (storage conditions, accessories still in place, original cases) that is lost once items are boxed up. An early estimate also helps you plan your move knowing what return you might expect.
Get a free estimate before your moving date
Send us photographs of your camera collection and we will respond with an honest, no-obligation estimate — usually within one working day. We work around your schedule and your timeline.
Start your free estimate →