Scrap gold buying is one of the most accessible ways to enter the precious metals business — and one of the most profitable when you know what you're doing. Whether you're eyeing estate sales, pawn deals, or jewelry from friends and family, the fundamentals of scrap gold buying are learnable by anyone willing to put in the time. In this guide, I'm going to walk you through everything I wish I'd known when I started: how to test gold, how to price it, where to find it, and — critically — how to avoid the beginner mistakes that eat your margin before you even know it happened.
I've spent more than 15 years buying gold from behind a pawn shop counter and in private deals across the country. In that time, I've bought tens of thousands of pieces of scrap gold. I've made money, I've made mistakes, and I've learned exactly what separates the buyers who build real income streams from those who lose money on their first few deals. Everything in this guide comes from that experience — not theory.
What Is Scrap Gold Buying?
Scrap gold buying simply means purchasing gold items — usually jewelry, dental gold, or broken pieces — with the intent of selling them based on their metal content rather than their retail or collectible value. When you buy scrap gold, you're buying the gold itself: the weight of pure metal inside each piece. The item's original retail price is irrelevant. What matters is how much pure gold it contains and what that gold is worth on the market today.
The business model works because there's a spread between what individuals will sell their gold for and what refiners will pay for it. According to the World Gold Council's supply and demand data, recycled gold consistently accounts for over 25% of total annual gold supply — meaning the scrap market is large, liquid, and reliable. Your job as a scrap gold buyer is to fit profitably in the middle. You buy scrap gold below the melt value, and you sell it at or near the melt value to a refiner or dealer. Simple on paper — but the details are where new buyers run into trouble.
When people talk about wanting to buy scrap gold, they typically mean one of three categories:
- Broken or unwearable jewelry — chains with missing clasps, rings that are bent or cracked, earrings missing a back
- Out-of-fashion pieces — items the seller just doesn't want anymore
- Estate or inherited gold — pieces passed down or found in collections
All three are fair game for scrap gold buying, and all three can yield solid returns if you price them correctly.
Tools Every Scrap Gold Buyer Needs Before Their First Deal
Before you buy a single piece of scrap gold, you need the right tools. Going in blind is how beginners get sold plated brass and pay gold prices for it. Here's what a basic setup looks like:
1. Jeweler's Scale (0.01g precision)
Weight is everything in scrap gold buying. You calculate value in grams or troy ounces, and a kitchen scale won't cut it. A digital jeweler's scale accurate to 0.01g is non-negotiable. You can find reliable options for $20–$60. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) defines the troy ounce standard used across the precious metals industry — 31.1034768 grams per troy ounce.
2. Gold Acid Test Kit
An acid test kit is the entry-level standard for testing scrap gold. You apply acid of different strengths to a small scratch of the metal on a touchstone and observe the reaction. Each karat reacts differently. A full kit with acids for 10K, 14K, 18K, and 22K costs around $30–$50 and can be used hundreds of times.
3. Electronic Gold Tester (optional but valuable)
Electronic gold testers provide a non-destructive reading in seconds. They're not as precise as acid on unusual alloys, but they're faster and seller-friendly — important when you're at an estate sale or doing a mobile buy. Expect to spend $150–$300 for a quality unit.
4. Loupe (10x magnification)
A jeweler's loupe lets you read hallmarks stamped inside rings or on clasps. Most genuine gold pieces are stamped with a karat mark (10K, 14K, 585, 750, etc.). A loupe is a $15 investment that pays for itself on your very first deal.
Never rely on a hallmark alone when you buy scrap gold. I've seen 14K stamps on pieces that tested as 10K — and I've seen unmarked pieces turn out to be 18K. Always test, even when the stamp looks good. The acid doesn't lie; the stamp sometimes does.
Understanding Karat and Purity: The Core of Scrap Gold Buying
Karat is the unit used to describe gold purity. Pure gold is 24 karats. Everything below that is an alloy — gold mixed with other metals like copper, silver, or zinc to add hardness. When you buy scrap gold, you're paying for the pure gold content inside the alloy, nothing else.
Here's how karat translates to purity percentage:
| Karat | Purity (%) | Common Stamp | Frequency in Scrap |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10K | 41.7% | 10K / 417 | Very Common |
| 14K | 58.5% | 14K / 585 | Very Common |
| 18K | 75.0% | 18K / 750 | Moderate |
| 22K | 91.7% | 22K / 916 | Less Common |
| 24K | 99.9% | 24K / 999 | Rare in Jewelry |
As a beginner in scrap gold buying, you'll encounter 10K and 14K most frequently — especially in the US market. These are the workhorses of the scrap gold world, and getting comfortable pricing them quickly is a key skill to develop early.
How to Calculate Scrap Gold Value: The Formula That Protects Your Profit
This is the math you'll use on every single scrap gold buying transaction. Get comfortable with it and you'll never overpay.
Melt Value Formula:
Melt Value = (Weight in grams ÷ 31.1) × Spot Price × Purity %
Let's walk through an example. Say you're looking at a 14K gold ring that weighs 5.2 grams, and today's gold spot price is $2,400 per troy ounce:
- 5.2 ÷ 31.1 = 0.167 troy ounces
- 0.167 × $2,400 = $401.40 (value if it were pure gold)
- $401.40 × 0.585 (14K purity) = $234.82 melt value
That $234.82 is the melt value — what the gold is worth if melted down to pure metal. To make a profit in scrap gold buying, you need to purchase it below that number. How much below? That depends on your cost structure and experience level.
When I started in scrap gold buying, I used a simple rule: never pay more than 80% of melt value on any piece until I had a reliable refiner relationship locked in. Refiner fees, shipping insurance, and occasional misidentified pieces will eat your margin fast if you're too close to spot. Start conservative — you can always loosen up as your confidence grows.
Pricing Scrap Gold: What to Pay and Why
The question every newcomer to scrap gold buying asks is: how much below melt value should I buy? The answer depends on your volume, your refiner relationship, and your risk tolerance. Here's a general framework:
| Buyer Level | Typical Offer (% of Melt) | Reasoning | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 65–75% | Buffer for testing errors, learning curve, refiner fees | Lower |
| Intermediate | 75–82% | Reliable testing, established refiner, moderate volume | Moderate |
| Experienced | 82–90% | High volume, low per-piece refiner fees, fast turnaround | Moderate |
| High Volume | Up to 93% | Bulk deals, direct refinery relationships, multiple revenue channels | Requires Experience |
One thing I want to stress for anyone new to scrap gold buying: the deals will always be there. Don't let a seller pressure you into paying more than your formula says is right. Walk away confidently. Sellers who see a buyer with discipline and knowledge often come back — and that's worth more than any single deal.
Where to Find Scrap Gold to Buy
Finding consistent sources is what separates hobbyist scrap gold buying from a real income stream. Here are the channels worth developing:
Estate Sales and Auctions
Estate sales are a goldmine — sometimes literally. Families liquidating estates often don't know the precise melt value of what they have, and jewelry gets lumped in with household items. Show up early, build relationships with estate sale companies, and you'll get first calls on jewelry lots.
Craigslist and Facebook Marketplace
When you buy scrap gold through online classifieds, you're often the first professional the seller has contacted. Many sellers will accept fair offers from a knowledgeable, trustworthy buyer rather than driving to a pawn shop. Always meet in safe public locations and bring your testing kit.
Word-of-Mouth Networks
Tell people what you do. Scrap gold buying thrives on personal referrals. Hair salons, barber shops, nail salons — these are places where people talk about needing money and selling their jewelry. A small business card campaign in the right neighborhoods can generate consistent leads.
Pawn Shops and Jewelers
Some pawn shops and jewelers accumulate scrap they'd rather liquidate in bulk than process individually. Once you have a track record, reach out to local shops and offer to buy their scrap lots regularly. Volume deals often mean better pricing for both sides.
Common Mistakes in Scrap Gold Buying (and How to Avoid Them)
I've watched too many beginners make the same expensive errors when they first start buying scrap gold. Here's what to watch for:
Trusting Hallmarks Without Testing
As I mentioned earlier: test every piece. Counterfeit gold and gold-plated items with legitimate-looking stamps are real. Acid testing takes 30 seconds. It's always worth it.
Paying for Stones and Settings
When you buy scrap gold, you're buying gold — not the diamonds, emeralds, or cubic zirconia set into the piece. Factor out the approximate weight of any stones before calculating melt value. Weigh the piece, estimate stone weight, and work from the difference. Beginners who don't do this routinely overpay.
Ignoring Spot Price Movements
Gold spot prices move daily — sometimes significantly. What made sense to offer at 9am may not work at 3pm if spot dropped 1%. Always pull the current spot price before making an offer in any scrap gold buying transaction. Kitco's live gold price chart is the industry standard reference — bookmark it and check it before every buy.
Not Having a Refiner Before You Buy
This is the one that traps most beginners. You buy scrap gold, feel great about the deal — then realize you don't know where to sell it. Establish your refiner relationship first. Call local refiners, ask about their payout rates and minimums, and do one small test transaction before you're sitting on a pound of gold you can't move.
Selling Your Scrap Gold: Building the Back End of Your Business
Scrap gold buying is only half the equation. Knowing where and how to sell what you buy is what turns a hobby into a business. Here are your primary options:
- Local refiners — Fastest turnaround, relationship-driven, often best rates for regular volume
- National mail-in refineries — Good for beginners accumulating small lots, slightly lower payouts but convenient
- Precious metals dealers — Some buy scrap directly and offer competitive rates on higher-karat pieces
- Other pawn shops or dealers — If you find pieces with strong retail or collector value, a dealer may pay above melt
For most people starting out in scrap gold buying, a local refiner is the best first relationship to build. Call two or three in your area, ask about their per-ounce deductions and processing timelines, and compare. The Responsible Jewellery Council maintains standards for gold refining practices — worth understanding as you vet potential refiner partners. A good refiner is as important to your scrap gold buying business as your testing kit.
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