Heirloom jewelry occupies a particular place on a family’s balance sheet. It carries financial value — sometimes substantial — but it also carries history, identity, and a chain of ownership that crosses generations. Selling an heirloom is irreversible in a way few other liquidity moves are. A heirloom jewelry loan offers an alternative: unlock the financial value temporarily while keeping the piece in the family, with the asset returned on repayment. The mechanics are the same as any collateral loan, but the use case is specific.
When an Heirloom Loan Makes Sense
Estate planning or transition liquidity
A family inherits jewelry through an estate but faces estate-tax timing, distribution mechanics among heirs, or a temporary capital need before other assets settle. A loan against the jewelry funds the immediate need while the longer process closes.
Short-term capital with sentimental floor
An heir or family member needs short-term capital — business, real estate, education, medical — but is unwilling to sell pieces with multi-generational sentimental value. A loan provides the cash without the irreversibility of a sale.
Avoiding family disagreement over sale
Heirlooms often sit at the center of family debate. A loan side-steps the sell-or-keep argument by doing neither permanently — the piece stays in custody, the cash funds the need, and the question of whether to ultimately sell can be revisited later.
Privacy considerations
Heirloom jewelry transactions sometimes involve sensitive family dynamics or estate context that borrowers prefer to keep confidential. A collateral loan does not require disclosure of the use of funds and generally does not appear on a credit report.
What Borro Accepts as Heirloom Collateral
Heirloom collateral spans a wide range of pieces:
- Signed pieces from major houses — Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, Bulgari, Tiffany, Boucheron, JAR, Belperron, Verdura. Borro has covered the signature premium on signed jewelry in detail.
- Period and revival pieces — Art Deco, Edwardian, Belle Époque, Retro, Mid-Century pieces from named designers and houses.
- Important stones — engagement rings with large diamonds, certified solitaires, fancy color diamonds, important rubies, sapphires, emeralds.
- Unsigned high jewelry — pieces from atelier workshops, important estates, and recognized regional traditions.
- Estate pieces with documentation — items with documented family history, original purchase records, or appraisals from period.
How Borro Appraises Heirloom Jewelry
The appraisal layers the standard inputs — signature, materials, condition, comp set — but also accounts for documentation that establishes provenance and authenticity. A piece with a documented chain back to the original purchase or a known prior owner can be appraised more confidently. Borro’s gemologists and jewelry specialists examine each piece in person, with appropriate technical tools, and produce a written appraisal that becomes the basis for the loan offer.
Typical LTV, Terms, and Rates
- Loan-to-value: 50 to 70 percent of appraised value, depending on the piece. Signed houses and important stones at the higher end; unsigned pieces with limited comp sets at the lower end.
- Term: commonly 6 to 12 months, renewable.
- Rates: priced in monthly basis points.
- Fees: appraisal, insured vault storage, and full-value insurance.
The Process
- Confidential inquiry. Photos and a description of the piece, shared in confidence.
- Appraisal. Insured courier delivery to a Borro vault. A specialist examines the piece, confirms any signatures or hallmarks, and assesses the materials.
- Written loan offer. Amount, term, rate, fees presented for review.
- Funding. Loan documents are signed; funds are wired same or next business day.
- Storage and repayment. Insured, audited vault storage for the term. On repayment, the piece is returned via insured courier.
Heirloom Loans vs. Selling
The case for a loan rather than a sale is almost always strong for true heirlooms. Selling is irreversible. The piece, once sold, generally cannot be reacquired at any price. A loan preserves the option to sell later if the family decides to, while funding immediate needs in the meantime. The tax framework also tends to favor the loan path — a loan is not a taxable event, while a sale typically triggers capital gains treatment. Borro covers this dimension in luxury asset loans and tax planning in 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a heirloom jewelry loan?
A short-term, asset-backed loan in which the borrower pledges inherited or family jewelry as collateral. The piece is held in insured vault storage for the term and returned on repayment.
Is the loan confidential?
Yes. Borro’s lending process is confidential. The loan generally does not appear on a credit report, and use of funds is not required for the application.
What if I don’t have original documentation?
Documentation supports appraisal but is not required. Borro’s specialists authenticate based on the piece itself — signatures, hallmarks, design, materials, craftsmanship.
Can multiple family members take the loan together?
Loans are typically structured with a single borrower, but Borro accommodates trust, estate, and family structures where appropriate. Discuss the specifics with the lending team during the initial conversation.
What if I decide to sell rather than repay?
If the borrower elects to surrender the piece in lieu of repayment, the lender takes the piece and the borrower has no further obligation. Some borrowers begin with a loan and transition to a sale later through Borro or another channel — the loan does not foreclose either path.
Talk to Borro About a Heirloom Loan
If you are considering borrowing against an heirloom piece — inherited, family, or estate jewelry — Borro’s specialists can provide an indicative quote within one business day. Photos and any documentation are enough to start, and the conversation is confidential.

