Sell Your Radio or Collection of Radios for the Highest Price at Auction
We are looking for rare radios, like early radios from the early 1900s through the 1920s, along with brightly colored Catalin radios and glass art deco radios.
Most valuable radios are old, but most old radios are not valuable. Here in Massachusetts we’ve got a surfeit of vintage and antique radios. On the one hand, that means collectors can be especially picky. On the other hand, your radio or collection of radios could be one they latch onto, and so it could bring you a surprising amount at auction – whether at live or online auction.
Your radio is worth what someone pays for it. We help increase the worth of your radio or collection by getting passionate and knowledgeable collectors to tune in. We’ll appraise your radios, get it or them dialed in for auction, and make sure that you’re getting every dollar possible.
Radio collectors go through phases, individually and collectively, and so we pay attention to what’s “hot” right now. In general, colorful Catalin radios, art deco radios, and early 1900s and 1910s radio equipment are sought-after and sell handsomely at auction We’re looking for those sorts of items.
What’s not sought-after at auction? Wooden floor model cabinet radios tend not to sell well, so we probably can’t help you with those.
What specific radios are selling well at auction? Some radios we sold recently at auction include a lot of 2 early Bakelite radios that sold for $11,000, a Motorola 50X Catalin Radio in yellow with faux tortoise trim that sold for $7,000, a Sparton 558 sled radio that sold for $3,000, and a Catalin Emerson Model BT248 Cathedral Radio that sold for $2,500, to name a few. Those are the sorts of models we love to see, because bidders love to see them, and our clients can make very good money from them.