Not sure whether your old rug is valuable or not? You are not alone. Many people have old rugs they cannot identify and do not know what to do with — and the only way to know for certain is to ask a specialist. We provide free, honest assessments for old rugs of any type. We will tell you what it is, whether it has value, and what we can offer. No fees. No obligation. No sales pressure.
Old Rugs We Have Discovered to Be Valuable
Let us be direct: not all old rugs are valuable. In fact, the majority of old rugs people bring to us for assessment turn out to have modest or minimal value — they are machine-made, tufted, or commercial pieces from the mid-to-late 20th century that have little collector market. We will tell you so if that is the case.
But here is the other side of that truth: some old rugs that people assume are worthless turn out to be genuinely valuable — and this happens more often than you might expect. A rug that has been on the floor of an old house for fifty years, that looks a bit worn and has been walked on by several generations, can turn out to be a 19th-century Persian piece worth £3,000. Or a stair runner that a house-clearance company would have thrown away turns out to be an antique Anatolian piece worth £1,500.
The reason is that genuinely valuable handmade rugs are not always easy to distinguish from ordinary commercial pieces without specialist knowledge. They don't always look spectacular. They can appear worn and unremarkable. And yet the construction, the materials, the dye quality, and the origin can add up to real collector value that only a specialist can see.
This is precisely why we offer free assessments. The cost of getting an expert opinion is zero. The cost of discarding a valuable rug without knowing what it is can be considerable.
These are indicators, not guarantees. Only a specialist assessment can confirm value — but these signs suggest it is worth finding out.
Important: none of these signs is conclusive alone. We have seen rugs with several negative indicators that turned out to have value, and rugs with several positive indicators that were modestly made commercial pieces. Send photographs — certainty requires expert eyes.
You have inherited a rug from a relative — a grandparent, an aunt, a family friend — and you have no idea what it is. It has been in their home for as long as you can remember. This is one of the most common situations we encounter, and also one of the most likely to yield a genuine find. Older generations in the UK acquired their rugs at a time when the antique rug trade was thriving, when quality Persian and Oriental pieces were widely sold through good furniture dealers and auction houses, and when it was normal to pay a proper price for a handmade rug. Many inherited rugs turn out to be exactly what they look like: quality old handmade pieces worth having assessed.
You are clearing a family home — either your own, a parent's, or as part of an estate — and there are rugs to deal with. Some may be obviously modern and of no value. But if the property is old and was well-furnished, there may be genuinely valuable pieces among the unremarkable ones. The cost of ignoring this possibility can be significant. Photograph anything that has the appearance of age, distinctive design, or quality construction, and let us look at it before it goes.
Rolled-up rugs in attics, lofts, and storage are among the most interesting submissions we receive. A rug that has been stored rather than used is often in better condition than one that has been walked on for decades. Old storage rugs from British houses regularly turn out to be genuine antique pieces that were put away for safekeeping and then forgotten.
Sometimes people have a rug they received as a gift, bought at a car boot sale, or acquired years ago in circumstances they cannot clearly remember — and they genuinely have no information at all about it. This is fine. We assess from photographs alone, without needing a history. The rug itself tells us what it is.
In natural light: (1) the full front face of the rug, (2) the back of the rug showing the reverse of the weave, (3) a close-up of the pile surface taken at a low angle, and (4) a close-up of the fringe at one end. Include a tape measure along one edge if you can. That is all we need for an initial assessment.
Upload your photographs and tell us the dimensions (length × width). Add any information you have: where it came from, how long you have had it, any labels on the back, your best guess at origin. But do not worry if you know nothing — photographs alone are usually sufficient.
Within 48 business hours, we will respond with an honest assessment. If the rug has value, we will explain what it is and make a fair purchase offer. If it does not, we will explain why clearly and with no sugar-coating. Either way, you will know where you stand — at no cost and with no obligation.
Value in an old rug comes from the combination of these factors — rarely from any single one alone.
Only genuinely hand-knotted rugs have collector value. This is the foundational requirement. Machine-made, tufted, and power-loomed rugs do not have a collector market regardless of other qualities.
Natural plant and insect dyes — madder, indigo, pomegranate — are a strong indicator of age and quality. They produce warm, harmonious colours that improve with age. Synthetic dyes, introduced from the 1870s, produce harsher and less collectable pieces.
Persian, Caucasian, Turkish, Chinese (antique) — rugs from recognised weaving traditions have established collector markets. An unidentifiable commercial piece from an unknown origin has limited appeal even if old.
Pre-1920 pieces attract the strongest collector interest. The older a piece, the rarer it is likely to be. Age combines with construction and material quality to determine the collector category a piece sits in.
A well-drawn, distinctive design with clear cultural character adds value. Generic or derivative designs — even in otherwise good pieces — reduce collector appeal. Strong, bold designs are often the most desirable.
Condition is always factored into value, but it is rarely disqualifying in genuinely old handmade pieces. Even worn or damaged antique rugs often have real market value. Never discard a rug because of wear without first getting an assessment.
Our main rug selling service — all types considered.
How our online valuation process works — quick, free, honest.
A complete guide to understanding rug value for private sellers.
If your rug turns out to be antique, this is our specialist service for it.