Dental gold is alloyed
Dental gold is rarely pure. Crowns, inlays and bridges are usually 10K–22K equivalent (roughly 40%–92% gold) and are mixed with palladium, platinum, silver and base metals for strength. Because purity varies so much, enter a custom percentage if you know the alloy, or estimate using the karat presets.
What affects your payout
- Non-gold metals: only the gold content has melt value here; platinum-group metals may add value but aren't included in this estimate.
- Refining fees: small dental quantities often carry higher per-gram refining costs.
- Buyer assay: a buyer will test the actual content, which may differ from the estimate.
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Frequently asked questions
How pure is dental gold?
Dental gold is alloyed and varies widely — typically the equivalent of 10K to 22K (about 40% to 92% gold), mixed with palladium, platinum, silver and base metals. Use a custom purity if you know the alloy.
Is a gold crown worth anything?
Yes — the gold content has real melt value. Enter the weight and an estimated purity to see a value range, but remember a buyer will assay the actual content.
Why is my dental gold payout lower than expected?
Only the gold content is valued here, refining fees on small quantities are higher, and buyers deduct a margin.