How to Sell a Rug — Best Way to Get the Most Money
Selling a rug — especially an antique or inherited one — is more complex than most people expect. The wrong selling route can leave you with a fraction of your rug's true value. This guide walks through every option, what each one costs you in fees and time, and when each makes sense.
Before choosing a selling route, get a free specialist valuation. This costs nothing, takes five minutes, and gives you a genuine figure to compare against auction estimates or dealer offers. Without knowing your rug's actual value, you cannot make an informed decision about where to sell it.
Step 1 — Know What You Have
The single most common mistake rug sellers make is choosing a selling route without first understanding what their rug is worth. A rug that looks decorative to an untrained eye can be a significant collector's piece. A rug assumed to be antique may be a modern copy. Specialist valuation establishes:
- Origin: Persian, Turkish, Moroccan, Caucasian, Chinese — each has different market demand
- Construction: Hand-knotted vs hand-tufted vs machine-made — the most important quality distinction
- Age: Pre-1920, antique, semi-antique, vintage, modern — directly affects value
- Dye type: Natural dyes (wool retains colour and softens with age) vs synthetic (can fade or bleed)
- Condition: How condition affects value for this specific type of rug
Once you know these things, you can make an intelligent decision about the best selling route for your specific rug.
Step 2 — Photograph It Correctly
Whether you're getting a valuation, listing on eBay, or submitting to auction, good photographs are essential. For valuation purposes you need three shots:
- Full front in natural daylight: Lay flat, photograph the entire rug from above. Avoid flash — it flattens texture and distorts colour.
- Full back: The most important photo for authentication. The reverse shows whether the rug is hand-knotted, what knot type is used, and how clearly the pattern mirrors the front.
- Close-up of pile detail: One corner, close enough to show individual knots. This allows assessment of KPSI (knots per square inch) and pile condition.
Additional photos of labels, inscriptions, any damage, or notable design features are useful but not required for the initial assessment.
Step 3 — Choose Your Selling Route
Option 1: Specialist Rug Buyer
Specialist buyers purchase directly from private sellers at genuine collector market prices. No commissions, no buyer's premiums, no waiting for a sale date.
Best for: Most sellers, most rug types — particularly antique, vintage, Persian, Turkish, and silk rugs.
Typical net return: 85–95% of market value (no fees)
Timeline: Offer within 48 hours, payment within one week
Collection: Arranged and paid by the buyer
Downside: You're selling to one buyer, not running a competitive auction
Option 2: Major Specialist Auction (Bonhams, Christie's, Sotheby's)
Appropriate for genuinely exceptional pieces — typically those valued at £20,000+. Major auction houses have global collector networks and can achieve hammer prices above what most private buyers will pay for outstanding pieces.
Best for: Exceptional pieces (£20,000+), particularly antique Persian, fine silk, or museum-quality Caucasian rugs
Typical net return: 55–70% of hammer price (after seller's commission 10–15% + buyer's premium 25–30% absorbed into hammer expectations)
Timeline: 3–6 months from consignment to payment
Downside: High combined fees, long wait, no guarantee of sale (unsold lots returned at your cost)
Option 3: Regional Auction Houses
Regional auctioneers sell rugs alongside general antiques and furniture. They attract a broader bidder pool than specialist auction but lack the specialist collector audience that drives top prices.
Best for: Decorative rugs with modest value (£200–£2,000)
Typical net return: 50–65% of hammer (standard seller's commission 15–20%)
Timeline: 4–8 weeks to the next appropriate sale
Downside: Generalist bidders undervalue specialist rugs; quality pieces consistently sell below specialist-buyer prices
Option 4: eBay / Online Marketplaces
eBay can work for rugs in the £50–£500 range where the rug is decorative rather than collectible. For genuine antique or handmade rugs, eBay buyers lack the expertise to recognise quality, so bids consistently underperform.
Best for: Decorative rugs under £500
Typical net return: 70–80% of sale price (eBay fees ~12–13%, PayPal fees ~3%)
Timeline: 7–14 days if listed correctly
Downside: Buyers without specialist knowledge won't pay collector prices; difficult and expensive to ship large rugs safely; return risk
Option 5: Local Antique Dealers / Clearance Companies
Local dealers buy at clearance prices — typically 10–20% of market value — to resell at a profit. They are rarely specialists in Oriental rugs and have little incentive to offer fair market prices.
Best for: Speed only — if you need cash immediately and don't care about getting market value
Typical net return: 10–25% of market value
Timeline: Immediate
Downside: Very low returns; dealers are buying to resell, not paying market price
Route Comparison: Real Example
A genuine antique Persian Tabriz rug, circa 1910, room size (3×4m), good condition. Specialist valuation: £8,000 market value.
Net Proceeds by Selling Route — £8,000 Market Value Rug
Illustrative example based on £8,000 market-value rug. Actual figures depend on specific piece and market conditions.
When to Use Each Route
| Route | Use When... | Avoid When... |
|---|---|---|
| Specialist Buyer | Any genuine handmade rug, any value range | You have a machine-made decorative rug |
| Major Auction | Exceptional piece, £20,000+ confirmed value | Value under £10,000 — fees erode returns |
| Regional Auction | Decorative rug, £200–£2,000 value | Genuine antique pieces — specialist knowledge missing |
| eBay | Decorative rug under £500, you can ship safely | Any genuine antique or handmade piece |
| Local Dealer | Immediate cash needed, value not important | Almost always — returns are far too low |
Frequently Asked Questions
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Know what your rug is worth before choosing how to sell it.
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