AS SEEN ON TV
Cash for Gold
Should you mail in Grandma's old brooch?
By Candice Lee Jones, Reporter
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, July 2009
If you have heaps of gold chains stuffed deep into your dresser drawers, those commercials offering to take unused jewelry off your hands in exchange for "cold hard cash" may sound mighty tempting. Cash 4 Gold even ran a Super Bowl ad featuring Ed McMahon.
If you take the risk to sell gold jewelry by mailing it in an envelope, can you actually expect to get anything back?
Yes, but assuming that your bling makes it through the mail intact, even reputable companies will pay you based only on the weight of the gold; they do not pay for gemstones. Jewelry that's still wearable and in good shape can fetch a higher price elsewhere than it would being sold for scrap. You can check the market value of gold at www.goldprice.org. A better option might be to sell gold coins.
If you decide to sell online, go to www.top-10-cash-for-gold.com, which ranks online gold buyers. The site's top pick: ExpressGoldCash.com.
Howard Rubin, of the National Association of Jewelry Appraisers, says local jewelers, protective of their reputations, are likely to give you a square deal and may pay more cash for gold if you trade in the gold toward a new piece.