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.

Start Here — Before You Do Anything Else

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:

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:

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

£8,000 £6,000 £4,000 £2,000 £0 ~£7,200 Specialist Buyer ~£4,800 Major Auction ~£3,200 Regional Auction ~£2,400 eBay ~£1,200 Local Dealer

Illustrative example based on £8,000 market-value rug. Actual figures depend on specific piece and market conditions.

When to Use Each Route

RouteUse When...Avoid When...
Specialist BuyerAny genuine handmade rug, any value rangeYou have a machine-made decorative rug
Major AuctionExceptional piece, £20,000+ confirmed valueValue under £10,000 — fees erode returns
Regional AuctionDecorative rug, £200–£2,000 valueGenuine antique pieces — specialist knowledge missing
eBayDecorative rug under £500, you can ship safelyAny genuine antique or handmade piece
Local DealerImmediate cash needed, value not importantAlmost always — returns are far too low

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my rug is worth selling through a specialist?
If your rug is hand-knotted (you can see individual knots on the reverse and the pattern mirrors the front), it is almost always worth a specialist assessment. Hand-knotted rugs from any origin or period have potential collector value that general routes consistently underrecognise.
What if I don't know where my rug is from?
That's fine — identifying the origin is exactly what a specialist valuation does. Submit three photographs and our specialists will determine the weaving tradition, age, and construction as part of the free assessment.
Can I sell an inherited rug without documentation?
Yes. Most antique rugs were never accompanied by documentation. Specialists assess the rug itself — construction, dye type, design — rather than relying on paperwork. Provenance documentation can add value for exceptional pieces but is not required for a standard sale.
What if the specialist offer is lower than I expected?
You are under no obligation to accept. Our valuation comes with a written explanation of the assessment — origin, age, construction, condition — so you understand the basis for the offer and can compare it against other routes.

Start With a Free Valuation

Know what your rug is worth before choosing how to sell it.

Get Free Valuation — 48 Hours

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