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How Much Is My Antique Furniture Worth?

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Antique furniture values span an enormous range — from a few hundred dollars for a Victorian side table to $12.1 million for a Newport blockfront chest by John Townsend. The difference between these extremes comes down to four things: maker, period, originality, and condition. A piece with its original surface, hardware, and construction fully intact will almost always outperform a restored example of equal quality, sometimes by a factor of ten or more.

American furniture from the colonial and Federal periods (1690-1820) commands the strongest collector market, particularly pieces attributed to documented cabinetmakers in Philadelphia, Newport, and Boston. English Georgian and Regency furniture — Chippendale, Hepplewhite, and Sheraton-style pieces — also trades actively and often at a fraction of comparable American work. Victorian and Edwardian furniture is plentiful and accessible, while Arts & Crafts (Mission) and mid-century modern pieces have seen sustained collector demand since the 1990s.

Understanding where your piece sits in this landscape is the first step toward an accurate valuation. Our AI tool cross-references your photos against 5M+ auction records from Sotheby's, Christie's, Bonhams, and Heritage Auctions to generate an instant price range — no appointment, no guesswork.

Types of Antique Furniture We Value

Upload a photo of any of the following — our AI identifies type, period, and condition from images.

Chairs & Armchairs Dining Tables Desks & Secretaries Cabinets & Vitrines Chests & Dressers Sideboards & Buffets Bookcases Armoires & Wardrobes Benches & Settees Sofas & Daybeds Side & Occasional Tables Beds & Headboards

Price Ranges by Style & Period

Verified hammer prices from Sotheby's, Christie's, Bonhams & Heritage Auctions. Maker attribution and provenance can push individual pieces well above these ranges.

Style Period Typical Range Key Value Driver
Colonial / Queen Anne 1700-1750 $1,500 - $50,000+ Original pad feet and carved splat-back chairs command the most
American Chippendale 1750-1790 $2,000 - $250,000+ Philadelphia and Newport examples reach the highest prices
Federal / Hepplewhite / Sheraton 1790-1820 $1,000 - $80,000+ Satinwood inlay and original brass hardware add significant value
Empire / Regency 1800-1840 $500 - $20,000 Ormolu mounts and figured mahogany veneers increase desirability
Victorian 1837-1901 $200 - $8,000 Walnut and rosewood in unrestored condition preferred by collectors
Arts & Crafts / Mission 1895-1920 $300 - $50,000+ Gustav Stickley with original finish and paper label commands strong premiums
Art Deco 1920-1940 $500 - $150,000+ Signed pieces by Ruhlmann or Leleu are trophy lots at major auction houses
Mid-Century Modern 1945-1970 $200 - $80,000+ Eames, Knoll, and Wegner in original upholstery and finish command the most

Condition, provenance, and documented maker attribution significantly affect realized prices.

What Affects Antique Furniture Value?

These six factors account for the majority of price variation at auction. Understanding them before you sell — or buy — can make a substantial difference.

1
Original surface and finish

Refinished furniture typically loses 50-80% of its value. An untouched original surface -- even if worn and patinated -- is far more desirable to serious collectors and institutions than a perfectly stripped-and-repolished piece. Never refinish before getting a valuation.

2
Original hardware

Period brasses -- bail pulls, escutcheons, hinges with cotter-pin construction -- intact and in place confirm authenticity and add measurable value. Replaced hardware is one of the most common and significant deductions in antique furniture appraisal.

3
Maker or workshop attribution

A piece attributed to John Townsend, Thomas Affleck, or another documented cabinetmaker can be worth 10-100x a similar anonymous piece. Paper labels, brand marks, secondary wood choices, and construction details are all evidence used to establish attribution.

4
Documented provenance

A recorded ownership history -- collection invoices, estate inventories, exhibition catalogues, or auction records -- adds value, particularly for American and English 18th-century furniture. Pieces from major named collections carry a consistent premium at auction.

5
Period construction details

Hand-cut dovetails (irregular in spacing and size), hand-forged nails with irregular heads, and period-appropriate secondary woods confirm authenticity. American pieces typically use white cedar, tulip poplar, or white pine as secondary wood depending on region.

6
Completeness and structural integrity

Case pieces with all original components command significant premiums: original glass in bookcase doors, all drawers present with original bottoms and runners, interior fittings intact. Missing elements are individually deducted. Structural repairs are preferable to replacements.

How to Get Your Antique Furniture Valued

1
Upload Clear Photos

Take well-lit photos of front, back, sides, and any maker marks or signatures. Include close-ups of the base, hardware, and any labels. The more detail, the more accurate the valuation.

2
Run the AI Valuation

Upload to our Quick Valuation Tool for an instant price range based on comparable sold items from Sotheby's, Christie's, and 40+ other auction houses.

3
Cross-Reference Auction Records

Verify your result by browsing Antique Furniture auction records filtered by date range, price, and auction house.

4
Download Your PDF Report

Generate a certified appraisal report for insurance, estate planning, or resale — accepted by most insurers and estate attorneys as supporting documentation.

Try the AI Valuation Tool — Free

Upload a photo of your antique furniture and get an instant price range in seconds, backed by 5M+ real auction results.

Notable Makers & Their Values

Attribution to a documented maker can multiply value tenfold or more. These are the most sought-after names at major auction houses and institutions.

John Goddard & John Townsend
Newport, Rhode Island
Blockfront case pieces, shell-carved desks and chests
$50,000 - $12M+
Thomas Affleck
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Chippendale carved chairs and case pieces
$20,000 - $500,000+
Gustav Stickley
Eastwood, New York
Arts & Crafts / Mission oak furniture with original finish
$1,000 - $50,000+
Herter Brothers
New York City
Gilded Age Renaissance Revival and Aesthetic Movement furniture
$5,000 - $500,000+
Emile-Jacques Ruhlmann
Paris, France
Art Deco marquetry furniture in exotic veneers and ivory
$50,000 - $4M+
Thomas Chippendale
London, England
Carved mahogany Georgian furniture, documented by The Director (1754)
$20,000 - $2M+

Frequently Asked Questions

Genuine antiques are typically over 100 years old. Key indicators: hand-cut dovetail joints with irregular spacing and sizing (machine-cut dovetails are perfectly uniform); irregular saw marks on drawer bottoms and back panels; hand-forged nails with slightly irregular heads; and wear patterns consistent with actual use -- worn stretchers, patina concentrated on handled surfaces. Our AI identifies these period construction markers from photos.

In order of importance: (1) Maker attribution -- a documented cabinetmaker multiplies value tenfold or more. (2) Originality -- original surface, hardware, and structural components. Refinishing can cut value by half. (3) Period -- pre-1820 American and 18th-century English command the highest prices. (4) Regional attribution -- Newport and Philadelphia lead for American furniture. (5) Provenance -- documented collection history adds a measurable premium.

No -- this is one of the most costly mistakes owners make. Refinishing, reupholstering with new fabric, or replacing hardware reduces value for serious collectors and at auction. A worn original surface is worth significantly more than a restored one. Get a valuation first, then consult a conservator (not a restorer) about any treatment. Conservation stabilizes; restoration replaces.

Primary woods (visible surfaces) in American furniture: mahogany (American Chippendale and Federal), walnut (William & Mary, Queen Anne, Victorian), cherry (New England Federal), and maple (country and painted furniture). Secondary woods (drawers, backs, internal framing) reveal regional origin: white cedar indicates New England, tulip poplar suggests Philadelphia, yellow pine points to the South. Our AI identifies wood species and regional characteristics from close-up photos.

Our AI achieves approximately +/-15% accuracy compared to realized auction prices when given clear, multi-angle photos that show construction details, hardware, any labels or marks, and overall condition. Accuracy improves significantly with more photos -- always include the back panel, drawer interiors, bottom of legs, and close-ups of any maker labels, stamps, or inscriptions. Unusual or highly attributed pieces benefit from a professional appraisal as a second step.

Antiques are over 100 years old (pre-1925 by the 25-year rolling standard used by US Customs). Vintage typically means 20-100 years old. Reproductions are modern copies made to look period. Construction reveals the difference: machine-cut identical dovetails, plywood, MDF, and staples indicate reproductions. Polyester finishes (shiny and plastic-feeling) indicate post-1950 manufacture. Period glues (hide glue, not yellow PVA) can be smelled when joints are opened.

For pieces worth over $2,500, a written appraisal from a certified appraiser (ASA or AAA member) is recommended for insurance purposes. For initial valuation, estate decisions, or pre-sale estimates, our AI provides an instant price range against verified auction data. For formal insurance appraisals, we can generate a PDF report that many insurers accept as a supporting document.

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