What Is Your Ambergris Worth?
Ambergris value depends on grade, weight, and quality. Here's how professionals assess it — and what you can expect to receive in New Zealand.
The Three Grades of Ambergris
Colour is the primary grading indicator.
The more aged the piece, the lighter — and more valuable — it becomes.
White ambergris is the rarest and most valuable — it represents decades of ocean ageing. Most beach finds in New Zealand are grey or black. Both have significant commercial value. Even small pieces of high-quality grey ambergris can be worth thousands of dollars.
What Determines Your Price?
Five factors that our buyers weigh when making an offer.
Weight
Ambergris is priced per gram. Even a 100–200g piece can be extremely valuable if the grade is high.
Grade / Colour
White commands the highest premium in the global perfumery market. Grey is in strong demand. Black is bought and sold but at a lower price point.
Purity
The fewer foreign materials (sand, debris, seaweed), the higher the value. A clean piece is worth significantly more than a contaminated one.
Surface Condition
Pieces that have been kept dry and uncontaminated since discovery retain more value. How you store it from the moment of finding matters.
Market Timing
Global perfumery demand fluctuates. Nabil advises on current market rates at the time of assessment, ensuring you get the best available offer.
Before You Do Anything Else
Important: Don't clean, sand, or cut your specimen before assessment. Any modification risks reducing value. Let Nabil assess it first.
Tip: Weight matters. Even if you think your piece is small, weigh it on a kitchen scale and include that in your submission.
I've graded 4,678 specimens. The difference between grey and white can be the difference between a good find and a life-changing one. Get it assessed properly before you do anything else.
Find Out Exactly What You Have.
Free assessment. No obligation. Nabil grades personally within 24 hours.
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