By Nell Whitcomb — for anyone in South Florida staring at a drawer of inherited valuables, unsure what they’re really worth.

When my aunt passed, I inherited a drawer that smelled like old velvet: a watch nobody could identify, three rings, a small oil painting, and a coin my uncle always swore was “worth something.” A buyer near me offered $900 for the whole lot, cash, on the spot. I almost took it. I’m very glad I didn’t.

Brilliant-cut diamond illustration representing fine jewelry sold at a North Miami Beach auction
The right stone in the right room tends to find its own price.

Cash is fast. Auction is patient — and patience pays for the right pieces

Here’s what nobody told me: a cash offer is engineered to be safe for the buyer. They have to resell, so they bake in their margin and the risk that they guessed wrong. An auction flips that — it puts your piece in front of people who genuinely collect watches, signed jewelry, listed art and antiques, then lets them argue over it with their wallets.

That painting turned out to be by a regional artist with a small, loyal following. The “something” coin was a key date. The lot a neighbor shrugged at brought far more the moment two serious bidders noticed each other.

Cash offer vs. the auction floor, side by side

Quick cash offerSelling at auction
SpeedMinutesA few weeks
Who sets the priceThe buyerCompeting collectors
Best forScrap gold, common piecesNamed, rare or signed items
Typical resultSafe, discountedOften well above the counter offer

When I’d happily skip the auction

I’m not a zealot about it. Scrap gold, snapped chains, common costume pieces — take the cash and don’t look back; melt price is melt price. Auction earns its keep only when an item carries a name, a maker, provenance, or real rarity.

Quick gut-check: if your piece has a maker’s mark, a signature, or you’ve ever wondered “is this rare?” — get an auction opinion before you accept any cash offer. It usually costs nothing and can change the number completely.

I consigned the watch, the painting and the coin. If you’re in the same spot, you can sell them through Auction Wallstreet, a North Miami Beach house that handles fine art, antiques, jewelry and watches — the four categories where bidding tends to beat a counter offer.

Auction gavel for selling jewelry, watches and fine art to the highest bidder in North Miami Beach
One clean hammer-fall, and the market — not a middleman — decides.

What tends to do best under the hammer

  • Signed & designer jewelry — a stamped name does real work at auction.
  • Vintage and complicated watches — especially anything with paperwork.
  • Listed or regional art — a documented artist beats “pretty but anonymous.”
  • Key-date coins & bullion — small, easy to undervalue, often the biggest surprise.
  • Sterling, antiques and collectibles — sets and provenance lift the result.

What other sellers told me

“Two estate rings sat in my safe for a decade. Consigned on a Tuesday, got paid after the sale for nearly triple the pawn quote.” — Renata, Aventura

“The honest part was them telling me which items weren’t worth the auction, and to just sell those locally.” — Marcus, Fort Lauderdale

FAQ

How do I know if my item is auction-worthy?

Look for a maker’s mark, a signature, a hallmark, or genuine rarity. When in doubt, have a house evaluate it — an opinion usually costs nothing and can move the number dramatically.

What’s the real difference between a cash offer and auction?

A cash offer is instant but discounts your piece for the buyer’s resale risk. Auction takes longer but lets competing collectors set the price for you.

How long does the process take?

Plan on a few weeks between consignment and sale day, plus settlement afterward — slower than a pawn counter, faster than most people fear.

What tends to perform best?

Signed jewelry, vintage or complicated watches, listed and regional art, and key-date coins — exactly the things a flat cash offer flattens.