How gold is priced comes down to three things — gold spot price, karat purity, and weight. Once you understand all three, you can calculate the value of any gold piece in under a minute.
The price of gold is based on the live spot price (the global market price for pure 24k gold), adjusted for karat purity and multiplied by weight in grams. The formula is: Weight × Purity × Spot price per gram = Melt Value. That number is what every transaction in the world is built on.
The calculation is not complicated once you break it into its three components. Every buyer, refiner, and dealer in the world uses the same underlying calculation. The price changes by the second — the karat and weight of the piece don't. Master these three inputs and you can evaluate any piece of gold in under a minute.
The live global market price for one troy ounce of pure 24k gold. Everything starts here. The gold spot price changes continuously during market hours based on trading activity worldwide.
How much of the piece is actually pure gold. 14k = 58.3%, 18k = 75%, 24k = 99.9%. Higher karat means more gold content and a higher value per gram.
Measured in grams for jewelry. The heavier the piece, the more gold it contains and the higher the melt value. Weight is weighed on a precision scale — every 0.1 gram matters.
Gold buyers pay a percentage of melt value — typically 65–85%. This covers refining, overhead, and profit. Understanding this means knowing melt value is the ceiling, not the offer price.
The gold spot price is the current market price for one troy ounce of pure 24k gold, traded on global commodity exchanges. It is the foundation for how gold is priced everywhere in the world — from a pawn shop in Dallas to a refinery in Switzerland. The gold spot price changes constantly throughout the trading day as buyers and sellers transact on exchanges like COMEX in New York and the London Bullion Market.
You can check the live gold spot price at any time on Kitco.com — the most widely used source among professional gold buyers. The gold spot price is always quoted per troy ounce. To get the price per gram, divide by 31.1035.
Gold spot price per gram formula: Current spot price ÷ 31.1035 = price per gram for pure 24k gold. Then multiply by the karat purity percentage to get the price per gram for any karat.
The gold spot price is not set by any single person or government — it is determined by global supply and demand on commodity exchanges, primarily COMEX (part of the New York Mercantile Exchange) and the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA). These markets run continuously during business hours across time zones, with the price updating in real time based on live trading.
In short, no one person or organization determines how gold is priced. The gold spot price is a consensus of millions of transactions happening simultaneously across global markets.
Once you have the gold spot price per gram, adjusting for karat is straightforward multiplication. Here's the price per gram across all common karats at a $3,000/oz spot price:
| Karat | Purity | Multiplier | Price per gram* |
|---|---|---|---|
| 24k | 99.9% pure | × 0.999 | ~$96.47 |
| 22k | 91.7% pure | × 0.917 | ~$88.47 |
| 18k | 75.0% pure | × 0.750 | ~$72.35 |
| 14k ★ | 58.3% pure | × 0.583 | ~$56.25 |
| 10k | 41.7% pure | × 0.417 | ~$40.23 |
*Based on $3,000/oz spot price. Always use the live price from Kitco.com for real calculations.
This is the exact calculation professional buyers use on every deal — the same formula used worldwide:
Enter weight, karat, and the live gold spot price. Get melt value and four buyer payout levels instantly.
How gold is priced on any given day is driven by the forces below. Understanding these helps you time deals and anticipate when buyers might tighten their margins.
When inflation rises, gold tends to rise with it. Investors treat gold as a store of value — when the purchasing power of cash falls, the price typically climbs as demand increases.
Higher interest rates often push the gold spot price down — when cash-bearing assets pay more, gold becomes relatively less attractive. Lower rates tend to support higher prices.
Wars, banking crises, and economic instability push investors toward gold as a safe haven. Major geopolitical events are some of the fastest movers of the gold spot price in both directions.
Gold is priced in US dollars globally. When the dollar weakens, the gold spot price typically rises — and vice versa. A strong dollar makes gold more expensive for foreign buyers, reducing demand.
When central banks — particularly in China, India, and Russia — buy large amounts of gold reserves, it increases demand and supports higher prices. Central bank activity is one of the most significant long-term drivers of how gold is priced.
Global gold mine output affects long-term supply. When production falls or new deposits are harder to find, reduced supply supports higher prices over time. Mining disruptions can move prices on news alone.
In practice, what you receive in a transaction differs from melt value. Buyers never pay 100% of melt — melt value is the ceiling, not the offer. Here's how it plays out:
The gap between melt value and what you receive is where the buyer's business lives. Understanding this — and what melt value is — lets you evaluate whether an offer is fair or low.
It's just math. Once you know the gold spot price, the karat, and the weight, the calculation takes less than a minute. That single skill — applied consistently — is what separates profitable buyers from everyone else.
Live price by karat and how to calculate your melt value.
Karat, purity, and how it affects the price per gram.
What percentage of spot price buyers actually pay.
How to use the spot price to time your sale.
The course covers pricing, testing, sourcing, and closing deals — 20+ videos from a professional buyer with 15+ years of experience.
Results will vary. This is not financial advice — for educational purposes only.