How Much Is a 22K Gold Bracelet Worth?

Estimates use the same USD spot basis as our calculators. Not financial advice, not a purchase offer, and not a guarantee of what any buyer will pay.

Gold bracelets typically weigh 4–20 grams depending on style. Tennis bracelets are lighter; solid link bracelets are heavier.

Bracelets and tennis lines can hide steel springs or mixed links; a full XRF read beats eyeballing yellow color alone.

For a typical weight in the common range, ~6 g of 22K gold might melt around $797.40 at current spot—highly variable by actual weight and condition.

Common variations that change weight

  • Length and thickness drive chain weight; the same style can vary by size class.
  • Clasps and tags may be different karat or steel—buyers may test or deduct them.

Gold Value Calculator

$/troy oz

Adjust this price to project a future value. 24K per troy oz.

Total gold value$797.40

Current 22K price$132.90/gram • $4133.66/oz

Est. offer at%:$398.70

Formula: weight × karat multiplier × spot price. 14K = 0.585, 18K = 0.75, 10K = 0.417.

Same USD spot basis as the estimates on this page. Adjust weight, unit, or karat to explore scenarios.

22K Bracelet — melt range by style (reference)

Uses the same USD per-gram rate for 22K on this page. Actual pieces vary; stones and non-gold parts are excluded here.

Style / sizeWeight (g)Approx. melt (USD)
Light bracelet48 (typ. ~6)$531.60$1,063.20
Medium bracelet815 (typ. ~10)$1,063.20$1,993.50
Solid bracelet1530 (typ. ~20)$1,993.50$3,987.00

Same bracelet, different karat

Other 22K jewelry types

Related links

FAQ

How much is a 22K gold Bracelet worth?
It depends on weight and karat. A typical bracelet in the common range might land around $797.40 melt at current spot—before stones, labor, or buyer discounts. Weigh your piece for a precise estimate.
Why is there a range for Bracelet weight?
Styles vary: chain thickness, ring size, and hollow vs solid construction change grams. Use the table on this page as a reference, then weigh your item.
Is this a cash offer?
No. Amounts are melt-value estimates from spot gold in USD, not an offer to purchase.