how to weigh gold before selling

How to Weigh Gold at Home Before Selling – Accurate Methods

Knowing the approximate weight of your gold before visiting a buyer puts you in control of the transaction. If a buyer’s scale shows 12g but your home scale showed 15g, that discrepancy – worth ₹41,907 at today’s rate – is worth questioning before you agree to any price.

What You Need

A digital kitchen scale or postal scale accurate to 0.1 grams is sufficient. Many pharmacy scales and kitchen scales marketed as accurate to ±1g work well for individual pieces. Jewellery scales accurate to 0.01g are available online for ₹300–₹800.

How to Weigh Your Gold at Home

Step 1: Turn on the digital scale and press tare/zero. Step 2: Place the gold piece alone on the scale – no wrapping, no box. Step 3: Note the reading in grams. Repeat for each piece separately. Step 4: Add the individual weights for the total.

What to Include and Exclude

●      Include: all gold metal components – chain, ring body, bangles, pendant frame

●      Exclude: plastic bags, paper, boxes – these add weight the buyer won’t pay for

●      Note: stones, pearls and clasps add gross weight but are not gold – at Attica they are removed before weighing

Home Weight vs Branch Weight – What to Expect

A professional calibrated scale at Attica Gold may read 0.1g–0.3g differently from your home scale for a single piece. This is normal due to calibration differences. A difference of more than 0.5g per piece should be questioned.

Weight Units Explained

1 tola= 11.6638 grams
1 pavan / sovereign= 8 grams
1 bhori= 11.664 grams (Bengal)
1 gram= 1 gram (universal)
Most Indian jewellery weighed inGrams

Tax Treatment When You Sell

Gold held over 24 months attracts 12.5% LTCG when sold; held under 24 months, your gain is added to slab income. Aadhaar is mandatory; PAN is required if your sale exceeds ₹2,00,000.

Why Choose Attica Gold Company

Attica Gold uses BIS-calibrated scales at every branch. You watch the weighing in front of you. No hidden deductions on weight. Your wait is over.

Frequently Asked Questions

What scale should I use to weigh gold at home?

A digital kitchen scale or jewellery scale accurate to 0.1g is sufficient for gold weighing. Postal scales and kitchen scales accurate to 1g give a reasonable estimate but may be off by ±1g on small pieces.

Is home weighing accurate enough?

Home weighing gives you a reference estimate to compare against a buyer’s quote. The official weight at Attica Gold uses a calibrated BIS-approved scale – which is the binding figure for payment.

Why should I weigh gold at home before selling?

Knowing your gold’s approximate weight before visiting a buyer means you can verify their quoted weight and identify any major discrepancy before agreeing to a price.

Can a buyer misrepresent the weight of my gold?

A reputable buyer like Attica Gold uses calibrated, certified scales. You watch the weighing process. If your home estimate differs significantly (more than 0.5g per piece) from the buyer’s reading, ask for a reweigh.

Should I weigh all pieces together or separately?

Weigh each piece separately to identify individual weights. This helps you spot if a piece is missing from the buyer’s total.

Do stones or clasps affect the weight?

Yes – stones, pearls and clasps add to the gross weight but are not gold. At Attica, stones are removed before weighing. Your home weight will include stone weight if you do not remove them.

What is tola vs gram?

1 tola = 11.6638 grams. If your scale reads in grams, divide by 11.6638 to convert to tolas.
 

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