Chinese Jade Valuations & Sales Advice
Do you have a Chinese Jade or Asian antique you’d like valued or sold? At Mark Littler Ltd, we offer expert, independent valuations and tailored advice on the best way to sell, whether that’s through auction, private sale, or direct to a collector.
With over 15 years of experience, our team specialises in Chinese porcelain, jade, bronze, scrolls and other Asian works of art. We provide professional written valuations and clear, impartial guidance on your next steps.
Every piece of Jade is different, and so is the best route to market. We’ll help you understand the true value of your item and advise you on whether it’s best suited to an international auction, a private buyer, or another route. There’s never any pressure to sell through us.
Whether you’ve inherited a Chinese jade, are handling a probate estate, or simply want to know what your piece is worth, our aim is to make the process simple, transparent and stress-free.
Asian Art Valuations
For Asian art valuations we can personally recommend the specialists below. Both are leading UK experts in Chinese, Japanese and South East Asian works of art.
Alexander Clement MRICS ASFAV
Asian Art, Watches and General Valuations
Halls Fine Art
Tel: +44 (0)1743 450700
Email: [email protected]
About Alexander
Alexander studied History of Art and Design at Staffordshire University and began his career as curator of the Royal Doulton Museum. He later ran the Ceramics, Glass and Asian Art departments at Phillips (later Bonhams), before becoming Director of the Chester saleroom. Since joining Halls Fine Art in 2015, he has built a highly successful Asian art department, achieving house record prices and handling important collections across the UK.
Bill Forrest
Director | Head of Department, Chinese, Japanese & South East Asian Art
Roseberys
Tel: +44 (0)20 8761 2522
Email: [email protected]
About Bill
Bill graduated in Ancient History from the University of Leeds and is a member of the Oriental Ceramic Society. He joined Roseberys in 2015 and was appointed Head of Department for Chinese and Japanese Works of Art in 2016. He has achieved notable results for important Chinese works, including six-figure hammer prices, and regularly undertakes UK and international valuations of Asian art.
What Is a Chinese Jade Worth? A Breakdown of Typical Values
From Decorative Curios to Imperial Treasures, the market for jade carvings spans a vast range. Modest 20th-century tourist pieces can be worth £20 to £100, whereas museum-quality imperial jades can fetch tens or even hundreds of thousands of pounds at auction. Value hinges on several factors, chiefly the quality of the stone (with translucent, bright green “imperial jade” commanding a premium), craftsmanship, age, subject matter, and provenance. Older carvings from the Qing dynasty or earlier tend to be more desirable, especially if they exhibit fine detail, subtle polish, and signs of legitimate wear.
Zitan-Mounted Archaic Jade Bi Disc (Eastern Han & Qianlong period)
An exceptionally large ancient nephrite jade bi (circular ritual disc) from the Eastern Han dynasty, later mounted on a carved zitan wood stand inscribed in 1770 for the Qianlong Emperor. It sold for HK$53.77 million (≈£5.2 million) at Sotheby’s Hong Kong in 2021, marking a world auction record for archaic jade.
Key factors: Imperial collection provenance (the Qianlong inscription), impressive size and craftsmanship, and the disc’s cultural significance. This piece’s blend of antiquity and imperial Qing embellishment made it incredibly prized by collectors.
White Jade Carving of a Quince (Qianlong period, 1736–1795)
A finely carved pale greenish-white jade sculpture in the form of a quince fruit with leaves, from the Qianlong era. Sold for $485,000 (≈£340,000) at Christie’s New York in 2016.
Key factors: Beautiful translucent “mutton-fat” jade material, expert high-relief carving, and imperial taste (the Qianlong Emperor was an avid jade collector). Although not as large or historically important as record-setting jades, this piece’s elegant artistry and excellent condition drove it to several times its estimate, illustrating solid mid-range demand for Qing jade carvings.
6 Factors That Affect the Value of Your Chinese Antiques
Provenance: Labels
One of the most overlooked indicators of value is an old dealer’s label. A sticker from Spink & Son, Bluett & Sons, Sparks, or Sydney L. Moss can add significant credibility, suggesting the piece once passed through the hands of a respected expert. Provenance like this provides reassurance to collectors and can elevate both interest and price at sale.
Many of these firms, like Spink or Bluett, kept detailed stock books, meaning a label could link your piece to archived records or historic exhibitions. That connection not only supports authenticity but may uncover a richer story, adding prestige, collector appeal, and potentially significant value.
Provenance: Auction History
Alongside dealer labels, auction history can be a strong indicator of value. If you know your item appeared in an older Sotheby’s or Christie’s sale, especially in the mid-20th century or earlier, it can provide vital context. Even just knowing the lot number and sale date can be enough to trace archived catalogues, which often include images, condition notes, and attributions.
This kind of documentation adds credibility, helps verify authenticity, and may reveal that the item once sold for a significant sum—making it far more attractive to today’s buyers.
Provenance: Family History
Many Chinese antiques have remained in the same family for decades, often acquired during travel, military service, or diplomatic postings. While these stories are important, family history is the least reliable form of provenance unless it can be backed up by dated photographs, letters, or original purchase receipts.
A detailed family account can still provide helpful context, especially if it includes when and where the piece was acquired, but without supporting evidence, such claims are treated with caution by buyers and valuers. If documentation can be found, it may significantly strengthen both the story and the item’s appeal.
Condition
Condition plays a major role in the value of Chinese antiques, especially porcelain. Even a small chip, hairline crack, or area of restoration can dramatically reduce what a piece is worth.
Historically, imperial kilns were known for their exacting standards. It is said that flawed wares were smashed on the spot to maintain the quality expected by the court.
That same mindset persists among collectors today. While rare or early pieces may still have value despite damage, perfect condition is always preferred—and often commands a significant premium.
Intended Market: Imperial, Domestic, or Export
Understanding who an object was made for can greatly affect its value.
Imperial wares, created for the Chinese court, were produced to the highest standards and are the most sought after by collectors.
Domestic wares, made for use within China, vary widely in quality and value depending on their period and craftsmanship.
Export wares, made specifically for trade with the West, are often more decorative and can still be desirable—particularly pieces made during the 18th century for the European market—but they rarely match the prestige or price of imperial pieces. Knowing the intended audience helps place a piece in its correct historical and market context.
Understanding Chinese Jade: The Key to Value
While age, condition and the skill involved in the carving are important when valuing Chinese jade, the most crucial factors in generating value is often the quality and colour of the stone itself.
Two Types of Jade – Jadeite or Nephrite?
There are two distinct types of jade and which one your item is made from makes a significant difference. Jadeite is the rarer form and is typically more valuable. When jadeite displays bright, translucent green tones it is known as imperial jade, which is the most sought after. Nephrite is the traditional jade stone used in China for thousands of years and can still be collectible, but it’s generally less valuable than Jadeite. Identifying which type of jade you have is one of the first steps in understanding its true value.
Has The Jade Been Treated?
Jade is often treated to enhance its appearance. Common treatments include dyeing the stone to improve its colour or bleaching it to remove flaws. These processes are often invisible to the naked eye but can dramatically reduce the value. Untreated, natural jade is always more desirable and commands significantly higher prices.
If you’re unsure what type of jade you have—or whether it’s been treated—our expert valuation service can help.
How to Sell Chinese Jade: Auction vs Private Sale
Once you know what your Chinese vase is worth, the next step is deciding how best to sell it. The right route depends on the item’s value, condition, and market appeal. In most cases, sellers choose between auction and private sale, each with its own pros and cons. This section explains the differences, so you can make an informed decision about what’s right for your vase.
Choosing How to Sell: Why Asian Art Is Different
When it comes to selling items like watches or signed prints, pricing is relatively straightforward. These markets are well documented, with clear benchmarks based on previous sales. If a similar print recently sold for £3,000 at auction, and you receive a private offer of £4,000, it’s easy to recognise that as a strong deal.
Chinese and Asian art doesn’t work like that.
The value of a vase or bronze isn’t defined by a consistent market price, but by the judgment of specialists and collectors. One expert might see a piece as decorative, while another might identify it as an underappreciated gem, and that difference can translate into thousands, or even tens of thousands, in sale value. In these cases, success depends as much on who sees your item as on what it is.
Which brings us to the next crucial decision: if auction is the route you’re considering, which auction house is the right one?
The Right Auction Can Make All the Difference
One of the clearest examples of why the right venue matters is the story of an imperial Daoguang-era hat stand, an ornate yellow-ground famille rose piece decorated with nine dragons and bearing a six-character reign mark in gilt.
Originally used as a reading lamp for decades in a North Wales bungalow, the hat stand came to light when the owner, then in his 80s, called in a valuer ahead of downsizing. It was consigned to a provincial saleroom with a modest estimate of £800. What followed was extraordinary: it sold for just under £100,000 — over 100 times the guide price.
But that wasn’t the end of the story.
A few years later, the same piece reappeared at Christie’s in London. Now correctly catalogued and marketed on the international stage, it realised £581,000.
