For the last few years I have seen a lot of commercials advertising cash for gold. So when a paid blogging company asked if I would be interested in trying out Cash For Gold’s service, I said sure. I had taken a look at their website and saw that in addition to gold, they also accepted silver (and titanium, diamonds, watches and estate jewelry, but I don’t have any of those except diamonds, and I plan on keeping my diamonds, since they’re in my engagement ring!). Silver is one thing I have a lot of, and I have some extra bracelets, trinkets, charms and such that I no longer wear or have any sentimental attachment to.
After signing up for Cash For Gold, the shipping instructions and padded envelope was at my front door within two days. Sending the items back was as easy as putting them in a clear bag (included with the shipping materials) and noting what I was sending back. I then went online to find a FedEx drop-off box, and took the sealed envelope to the closest location I found (slightly related: both FedEx and UPS have drop-off boxes all over the damn place, but they’re never where you would expect them to be!).
I did hear back from Cash For Gold very quickly — within two days — but not with good news. The items I sent them are apparently not worth anything, but they still generously offered to send everything back via USPS. Which they did, and quite quickly, if I do say so myself.
While I haven’t personally been able to compensate from Cash For Gold’s pay-for-gold (and other precious metals and gems) services, I have heard of other people being offered a decent deal for unwanted jewelry. But I did interact with their customer service, albeit briefly, and they seemed honest and decent.
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Name: Alyssa
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