Gold rings are among the most straightforward items to value accurately — and among the most frequently undervalued by quick-sale services. We weigh every ring precisely, identify the hallmarks and their assay office, assess any gemstones separately, and pay against the current gold price rather than a fixed schedule.
Whether you have a single signet ring, a box of mixed gold jewellery, or a wedding band you no longer wear, the process is the same: everything is assessed transparently on camera, with a written offer per piece so you know exactly what each ring is worth. Free insured postage. Written valuation. Paid in 72 hours.
We buy gold rings of all types, purities, and conditions across the UK. A ring does not need to be in perfect condition to have value — gold content remains gold content regardless of wear, scratches, or damage. If you are unsure whether your rings are gold or gold-plated, email us a photograph of the hallmarks and we will advise before you send anything.
Signet rings in 9ct and 18ct gold are among the most consistently bought items we receive. Whether engraved with initials, armorial bearings, or left plain, value is primarily determined by weight and purity. Heavier oval or rectangular-topped rings with broad shoulders tend to contain more gold than smaller styles. Engraving rarely reduces value significantly; the gold is there regardless of what is cut into the surface.
Plain gold wedding bands — court, flat, or D-section — are valued cleanly on weight and purity. A wider 22ct band from the 1940s or 1950s will typically contain more gold than a slimmer modern 9ct equivalent and return a higher price accordingly. Eternity rings with pavé or channel-set stones are assessed with the stones taken into account. We accept worn, bent, or resized bands without discount for cosmetic condition.
Higher-purity gold rings — 18ct (75% gold) and 22ct (91.7% gold) — return more per gram than 9ct equivalents, often substantially so. Victorian and Edwardian rings were frequently made in 18ct as standard, and many carry the old British hallmarking system with date letters that allow precise attribution. 22ct rings are rarer and particularly associated with earlier Georgian and Indian-made pieces; we assess all correctly.
Diamonds, rubies, sapphires, and emeralds set into gold rings are assessed independently of the metal. A fine natural sapphire or an old-mine diamond in an 18ct setting may be worth considerably more than the gold alone. We assess stone quality, origin where determinable, and market demand. Smaller stones in cluster or half-hoop settings also contribute value, particularly old-cut diamonds in Victorian and Edwardian pieces.
Period rings made before 1910 frequently carry value beyond their gold content, provided they retain their original form and setting. Mourning rings, memorial rings, regard rings (with gemstones spelling a word), and keeper rings are particularly sought. Maker's cartouches from known Birmingham or London jewellers add a further premium. We assess the piece as both a gold object and an antique, and offer whichever reflects the higher value.
Bent shanks, cracked hoops, solder repairs, and missing stones do not eliminate value. The gold in a damaged 18ct ring is the same gold as in a perfect one. If a stone is missing, we assess the ring on its metal content and note the empty setting; if stones are present but chipped, we assess them at their current condition. A bent ring straightened by a jeweller has the same gold content as it did before the damage.
The fundamental calculation is weight multiplied by purity multiplied by the gold price. Gold is traded by the troy ounce internationally; we convert to grams and apply the current spot price at the time of assessment. A ring's purity is expressed in carats: 9ct contains 37.5% gold, 14ct contains 58.5%, 18ct contains 75%, and 22ct contains 91.7%. This means a 10-gram 22ct ring contains nearly two and a half times more gold than a 10-gram 9ct ring of identical weight. The purity mark — stamped and tested — is not a matter of estimation.
Above the melt baseline, we assess whether additional value exists. Period rings with intact hallmarks, maker's cartouches from known firms, or gemstones of genuine quality can all push the price meaningfully above scrap. The assay office mark and date letter allow precise dating: a London-hallmarked ring with a Victorian date letter and a maker's mark traceable to a reputable firm is both a gold object and a collectible antique. We pay the higher of the two values, not the lower.
Email a photograph of the rings and, if visible, the hallmarks. We confirm they are gold and advise on what to expect before you post anything.
We send a free prepaid, tracked and insured label. Your items are insured to £5,000 from the moment the courier scans the parcel.
Your parcel is opened publicly on YouTube. Condition is documented on camera before any specialist handles your items.
Each ring weighed, hallmarks read, stones assessed individually. Accept what you want to sell; we return the rest free. Paid in 72 hours or +3%.
Call us on 01234 815116 or email support@fairvintage.co.uk.
Get your free pack →The starting point is always gold content: weight in grams multiplied by the purity, multiplied by the current gold price per gram. A 5-gram 18ct ring contains 3.75 grams of pure gold. From that melt baseline, we assess whether the piece has additional value — as a desirable antique, a piece by a named maker, or because of the quality of any gemstones. Plain modern rings typically sell close to melt; period rings with maker's marks can exceed it significantly.
British hallmarks confirm the metal and its purity. The key marks are: the fineness mark (375 for 9ct, 585 for 14ct, 750 for 18ct, 916 for 22ct), the assay office mark (an anchor for Birmingham, a rose for Sheffield, a leopard's head for London, a castle for Edinburgh), and the date letter indicating the year of testing. Together they give us the metal, purity, where it was tested, and the year — all of which inform the valuation.
Yes, straightforwardly. A plain gold wedding band in any condition — worn, bent, even cracked — has value based on its gold content. The price is determined by weight and purity. A heavier 22ct wedding band contains substantially more gold than a lighter 9ct ring of similar appearance. We weigh accurately and pay fairly against the day's gold price.
They can, significantly. Diamonds, rubies, sapphires, and emeralds are assessed separately from the gold mount. A fine natural ruby or untreated sapphire in an antique gold ring may be worth more than the gold itself. Smaller stones in cluster settings — seed pearls, rose-cut diamonds, old-mine diamonds in Victorian rings — also carry collector value beyond melt. We assess each piece individually and tell you what each element contributes.
Yes. Older rings made before the Hallmarking Act 1973 may carry no marks, or marks worn away over time. We test metal purity using acid testing and electronic XRF testing where appropriate. Hallmarks are a useful confirmation but not a requirement. Foreign-made rings may bear continental marks we also recognise. No hallmark does not mean no value; it simply means we test rather than read.
Within 72 hours of your parcel going live on our YouTube channel — guaranteed. If we miss that window, we add 3% to your total.
Every ring weighed precisely, hallmarks identified, gemstones assessed separately. Written offer per piece. Open live on YouTube. Paid within 72 hours.