Rugs 100 years and older require specialist expertise. Age premiums of 1.8–3.0× apply in the RUG Index formula for documented antique pieces. Our RICA-certified appraisers are trained to verify age, authenticate origin, and identify period characteristics — producing reports accepted by estate courts, the IRS, and major insurance carriers.
An antique rug (100+ years old) occupies a fundamentally different market than a modern rug. Its value depends not just on the five standard pillars but on additional factors that require specialist knowledge: the authenticity of the age claim, the rarity of the origin and pattern, the condition relative to its age, and the documentary trail supporting provenance.
The RUG Index antique premium applies automatically for rugs documented as 100+ years old — but the documentation itself requires expert assessment. A dated receipt, auction record, estate inventory, or laboratory fiber analysis can each contribute to the age claim. Our appraisers assess all available evidence and state their confidence level in the report.
Foundation fibers (cotton foundations became common post-1920s), natural vs. synthetic dyes (synthetic aniline dyes introduced in the 1860s, chrome dyes in the 1920s), wool quality and oxidation, weaving characteristics specific to historical periods, and pattern elements that date to specific eras.
Multipliers apply to documented pieces. Undocumented claimed ages receive a partial premium pending verification.
For antique pieces we recommend our Comprehensive ($125) or Estate/Legal ($250) report.
Age authentication for rugs involves examining a combination of physical evidence and documentary evidence. A skilled appraiser uses multiple signals simultaneously — no single indicator is conclusive on its own, but a consistent pattern across several markers produces a confident assessment.
The introduction of synthetic dyes provides the clearest historical boundaries for dating. Aniline dyes arrived in the 1860s and were in wide use by the 1870s — their distinctive (often fugitive) colors and bleed patterns are identifiable under magnification. Chrome mordant dyes became common in the 1920s. A rug with no trace of synthetic dyes and consistent natural dye chemistry — madder, indigo, pomegranate, weld — has strong physical evidence for pre-1870s production.
Cotton foundations became widespread in Persian city rugs only in the late 19th century; earlier city rugs typically used wool foundations, while tribal pieces used wool throughout. Jute foundations indicate 20th-century commercial production. Silk foundations are found in high-quality workshop pieces from Kashan, Qom, and a few other centers.
Wool in older rugs shows characteristic oxidation — a softening and slight brittleness of the fiber that is distinct from mechanical wear. Heavily oxidized pile that is simultaneously still intact suggests genuine age. New wool mimicking antique oxidation through chemical washing (tea washing, bleaching) can be identified by the absence of the characteristic fiber structure of oxidized wool.
Purchase receipts, auction house records, estate inventories, dated photographs showing the rug in situ, and insurance records all contribute to establishing documented provenance. For IRS purposes, documentary evidence is required to receive full credit for the age premium — physical evidence alone supports a partial premium while the documentation is noted as absent or incomplete.