- Jewelry Identifier
- Gold melt value
- 9K · 1 troy oz
* Gold melt value
9K 1 troy oz melt value today
1 troy oz of 9K gold (37.5% pure gold) is worth about $1,522 in melt value as of July 13, 2026 — a scrap buyer typically pays ~85% of that ($1,293) after refining and margin. That weight is typical of solid gold chains, heavy bracelets, multi-piece lots.
Published July 11, 2026 · Updated July 13, 2026
9K · 1 troy oz — live estimate
- Melt value
- $1,522
- Realistic scrap (~85%)
- $1,293
- Pure gold content
- 11.664 g
- Per-gram melt
- $48.92/g
- Purity
- 37.5% (9K)
- As of
- July 13, 2026
The calculation
melt = spot/g × purity × weight(g)
= $130 × 0.375 × 31.1034768
= $1,522Scrap buyers typically deduct ~15% for assay and refining, landing near $1,293. Designed or branded pieces can sell for more intact than melted.
What usually weighs about 1 troy oz?
At 1 troy oz, you are usually looking at solid gold chains, heavy bracelets, multi-piece lots. Confirm the hallmark matches 9K before you accept a scrap offer — plated lookalikes are worth far less.
- Per-gram live price: Gold price hub
- Stamp decoder: jewelry hallmarks
- Other weights: Gold melt table
Before you sell
- Confirm the 9K stamp (or equivalent fineness mark).
- Weigh in grams on a jewelry scale; exclude stones and non-gold parts.
- Compare at least two scrap offers against the $1,293 ballpark above.
- Not sure of the metal? Scan it in the Jewelry Identifier app first.
* Frequently asked
FAQ
- Q. How much is 1 troy oz of 9K gold worth today?
- A. About $1,522 in pure melt value as of July 13, 2026. A realistic scrap offer is near $1,293 (~85% of melt) after refining and margin.
- Q. How much pure gold is in 1 troy oz of 9K?
- A. 9K is 37.5% gold by weight, so 1 troy oz contains about 11.664 g of pure gold.
- Q. How do I calculate 9K value myself?
- A. Multiply today's gold spot per gram ($130) by the purity (0.375) and by the weight in grams (31.1034768). That is $130 × 0.375 × 31.1034768 = $1,522.
- Q. Is 1 troy oz a normal weight for 9K jewelry?
- A. Yes for solid gold chains, heavy bracelets, multi-piece lots. Weigh only the gold — exclude stones and non-gold findings — before using this estimate.
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