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💎

What's this
worth?

Sherloot is the AI antique appraiser in your pocket. Snap any old object and find out what it is, when it's from, and a rough market value range — in seconds.

Built for thrift store hunters, garage sale flippers, estate sale shoppers, and anyone who's ever wondered "wait, is this old thing actually valuable?"

First 3 appraisals are on us.

How it works

Three taps. No setup. Just your photo and an answer.

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1. Snap it

A clear photo of the object — or a maker's mark, signature, or label if there is one.

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2. AI examines

Google's Gemini vision model checks era, category, materials, and style.

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3. Get the value

A conservative market value range, the era, and a clear next step.

Built for finders

🛍 Thrift & estate sale shoppers

Spot-check anything that catches your eye before paying. Beat the resellers at their own game.

📦 eBay sellers

Quickly figure out what to call something and what to list it for. Saves hours of guess-and-check.

🧹 People clearing out a house

Inheriting an attic full of stuff? Find out what to donate, what to sell, and what to take to a real appraiser.

🤔 Curious people

"What is this weird thing my grandmother kept?" — Sherloot has an opinion.

Frequently asked questions

How does Sherloot estimate value from a photo? +

Sherloot uses Google's Gemini vision AI to identify the object's category, era, and likely origin from visible details — materials, marks, style, condition. It then gives a conservative market value range based on what comparable items typically sell for.

Is this a real appraisal? +

No. Sherloot gives you a hint, not a professional appraisal. For anything potentially valuable, get a real appraiser to confirm before you buy, sell, or insure.

Is Sherloot free? +

Your first 3 appraisals are completely free. After that, an optional Pro subscription unlocks unlimited appraisals.

What can Sherloot identify? +

Furniture, ceramics, glass, jewelry, watches, coins, stamps, paintings, prints, books, vintage toys, lamps, tools, instruments, tableware, memorabilia — anything you might find at a thrift store, estate sale, or in an attic.