Consignment
Jewelry Insurance.
Bailee + Memo
Folio · 2026 Ed.
A consignment jewelry operation is one of the most carefully governed retail accounts in the insurance market — and one of the most frequently underwritten incorrectly. The traditional jewelry trade has had a working term for this arrangement since the 1890s. They call it memo. Not consignment. Not sale-or-return. Memorandum — the original Latin shorthand for goods delivered for inspection, possible purchase, or display, with title remaining unmoved at the moment of delivery.
The brokerage places coverage for retailers, dealers, designers, and platforms that operate on memo or true consignment — single-storefront stores, multi-location specialty groups, online consignment platforms, estate-and-vintage dealers, and trade-show operators rotating goods between owners and showcases. The form has to respect what the trade actually calls these transactions and what the Uniform Commercial Code actually does to them, because the gap between the trade's vocabulary and the statute's vocabulary is where claims fall apart.
FTC Jewelry Guides at 16 CFR Part 23 require disclosure of diamond and gemstone treatments under §23.14 and §23.24 — applies to consignment dealers selling on behalf of others.
16 CFR § 23.14 / § 23.24Per-delivery aggregate threshold that brings a memo or consignment within the UCC's consignment definition under § 9-102(a)(20)(B).
UCC § 9-102(a)(20)(B)Annual purchase or sales threshold above which a dealer in covered goods becomes subject to FinCEN AML program requirements at 31 CFR Part 1027.
31 CFR § 1027.100(b)(1)Lapse period for a UCC-1 financing statement protecting a consignor's interest. Failure to renew leaves consigned goods exposed to consignee's general creditors.
UCC § 9-515What the trade calls memo. What the UCC calls consignment.
Two vocabularies sit on top of one transaction. The jewelry trade has its own — memo, the working term for goods delivered to a retailer or dealer for display, inspection, or possible sale, with title remaining with the supplier until the goods are sold or purchased. The Jewelers Vigilance Committee has minutes of meetings discussing memo transactions going back to the 1890s. The Jewelers Board of Trade — the industry's credit-rating bureau, in operation since 1884 — has been publishing standards around them for over a century. Memo is older than the federal trademark statute and older than the FTC itself.
The Uniform Commercial Code came later, and it used different words. Article 9 of the UCC, revised in 2001, defines "consignment" at § 9-102(a)(20) and treats the consignor's interest as a purchase-money security interest in inventory under § 9-103(d). Article 2 covers "sale or return" at § 2-326. The legal effect is that almost every memo transaction in the jewelry trade is, under the statute, a consignment subject to UCC Article 9 — even if the parties never use that word.
That's the structural reason this account class is hard. The forms in the standard market frequently weren't drafted with the jewelry trade's terminology in mind, and the trade's contracts frequently weren't drafted with the carrier's form definitions in mind. The brokerage's role is reading both documents together and matching the wording.
Memorandum
Goods delivered by a supplier to a retailer or dealer for display, inspection, or potential sale. Title remains with the supplier; possession transfers to the recipient. Industry working term used in the trade since at least the 1890s.
Consignment
A statutory category — delivery of goods worth $1,000+ to a merchant who deals in goods of that kind and is not generally known by creditors to be substantially engaged in selling the goods of others.
Sale or Return
A statutory category in Article 2 — a sale where the buyer can return unsold goods. Goods held on sale-or-return are subject to claims of the buyer's creditors while in the buyer's possession.
The Jewelers Board of Trade introduced an automated UCC-1 filing service in 2021 specifically to help member jewelers perfect their interests in memo goods — a recognition by the trade itself that the underlying statutory framework remains in force whether or not the trade contract uses the word "consignment."
Six handler models. Six rating profiles.
A "consignment jewelry" operation describes at least six distinct operating models. Each carries its own bailee posture, regulatory exposure, and coverage architecture. The grid below maps what each one actually is.
The Retail Consignment Store
A storefront receiving estate, vintage, or designer jewelry from individual sellers on consignment — typically with a commission split at sale and an agreed memo period. The store doesn't own the inventory; it holds it as bailee. Customer-goods coverage is the load-bearing form.
The Estate & Vintage Dealer
Buys outright from estates, individuals, and at auction — but also takes selected pieces on memo from collectors and dealers. Mixed owned-and-consigned inventory; appraisal documentation is the linchpin. FTC Jewelry Guides disclosure requirements activate on every piece sold.
The Independent Designer On Memo
An independent or studio designer placing pieces on memo with retailers — fashion-jewelry boutiques, fine-jewelry stores, hotel galleries. The designer remains owner; the host retailer holds as bailee. UCC-1 filing protects the designer in the host's bankruptcy.
The Online Consignment Platform
Receives jewelry from individual consignors via shipped intake, authenticates, photographs, and lists for online sale. Cyber, PCI-DSS, and breach-notification compliance sit alongside bailee. Inland-marine transit coverage between consignor, vault, and buyer is critical.
The Auction-Adjacent Specialist
A dealer who takes pieces on consignment for sale through auction-house channels — privately negotiating buyer interest or routing through major houses on a referral or commission basis. High peak aggregates; rigorous chain-of-custody documentation expected by carriers.
The Trade-Show Rotation Dealer
Pieces rotate through major shows — JCK Las Vegas, the Centurion Show in Arizona, the AGTA GemFair in Tucson — between owned booths and consignor showcases. Coverage scoped to show schedules with location reporting and elevated in-transit limits during show season.
16 CFR Part 23 — the disclosure rules that apply at the point of sale.
A consignment dealer selling someone else's jewelry is still the merchant at the point of sale. The FTC Jewelry Guides at 16 CFR Part 23, last revised in 2018, apply to that sale the same way they apply to a store selling owned inventory. Misrepresentation of grade, treatment, origin, or composition is an unfair or deceptive practice — and the consignment dealer is the party on the receipt.
The Jewelers Vigilance Committee publishes the Essential Guide series covering memo, FTC Jewelry Guides compliance, and platinum, gold, and silver marking. The guides are free to download with email registration at jvclegal.org and are the de facto compliance reference for the trade.
Deception (General)
Unfair or deceptive to misrepresent type, grade, quality, weight, cut, color, treatment, origin, or any material aspect of an industry product. The baseline rule.
Diamond Treatments
A diamond is a gemstone product. Diamond treatments must be disclosed in the manner prescribed in § 23.24 of the Guides.
Gemstone Treatments
Seller should disclose a gemstone treatment if it is not permanent, creates special care requirements, or has a significant effect on the stone's value. Three independent triggers.
Gold Content
Misrepresentation as to gold content. Karat-quality marks, plating disclosures, and overlay claims have specific permitted-and-prohibited language under this section.
Platinum & PGM Group
Misuse of "platinum," "iridium," "palladium," "ruthenium," "rhodium," "osmium." The 2018 revisions added new rhodium-plating disclosure requirements.
Pearl Treatments
Added in the 2018 revisions. Pearl treatments must be disclosed if not permanent, requiring special care, or significantly affecting value — paralleling the gemstone framework.
Twelve lines. What goes on a clean account.
The worksheet on the right is the structural backbone of a consignment jewelry placement. Some lines are non-negotiable; others activate based on operating model. The brokerage matches the build to the actual handler profile — the multi-location specialty group with a $4M peak aggregate doesn't need the same structure as an independent designer placing pieces on memo with three boutique partners.
The Jewelers Block Policy (JBP) remains the foundational form for the class. It originated in the London market in the late 1800s as a single policy answering the specific exposures of jewelry handlers — and a century-plus of underwriting refinement has kept it the load-bearing instrument for any jewelry account where bailee, in-transit, and high-value crime exposures all coexist.
A JBP is a manuscript policy — meaning the form is custom-drafted for the account rather than pulled from an ISO template. The specific bailee, in-transit, and exhibition wording matters enormously. The brokerage reviews each carrier's actual policy language, not the marketing summary.
Jewelers Block Policy
The foundational manuscript form. Combines BPP, customers' goods (bailee), in-transit, and exhibition coverage into one schedule. Valuation method (replacement vs. agreed) negotiated at submission.
Customers' & Consignors' Goods
Property of others on premises and in transit. Per-consignor schedule for higher-value memo arrangements; aggregate at peak season scrutinized by underwriters.
Commercial General Liability
Premises bodily injury and property damage. Personal & advertising injury — relevant for any operator making claims about provenance, treatment status, or appraised value.
Crime / Burglary / Robbery
Forcible-entry burglary, daytime robbery, employee dishonesty. UL-rated safe expectations and central-station alarm certification scale with peak aggregate values.
Professional Liability (Appraisal E&O)
For any operator providing appraisal opinions — for insurance scheduling, estate purposes, or sale documentation. GIA, AGS, NAJA, ASA credentials referenced by carriers.
Cyber & Privacy
Breach response, PCI-DSS, social-engineering and funds-transfer fraud. Critical for online platforms; relevant for any operator collecting consignor PII or handling stored payment data.
Workers' Compensation + EL
Statutory coverage for W-2 staff. Gemologists, appraisers, and bench jewelers typically W-2 under state ABC tests including California AB 5.
Business Income / Extra Expense
Lost margin and continuing expenses during a covered loss. Period of indemnity reflects the operating cycle — for trade-show operators, that calendar drives the math.
Inland Marine / Transit
Shipments to and from consignors. USPS Registered Mail remains the high-value standard for individual shipments; FedEx Custom Critical and Brink's for multi-pair or high-aggregate movements.
Trade-Show / Exhibition Floater
Schedule-based coverage for pieces traveling to JCK Las Vegas, Centurion, AGTA GemFair, JA New York, and other trade shows. Location reporting and security plans reviewed.
Umbrella / Excess Liability
$1M–$5M typical first layer. Major mall and luxury-center landlord agreements frequently require $5M–$10M total liability tower.
FinCEN AML Compliance Support
Not insurance — but the dealer must maintain a written AML program once annual transactions cross $50,000 in covered goods. The brokerage points operators to the JVC compliance guides.
The $50,000 threshold that quietly applies to consignment dealers.
The federal anti-money-laundering rules at 31 CFR Part 1027 apply to "dealers in covered goods" — including jewelers. A jeweler is subject to the rules once the dealer's annual purchases and sales of covered goods (jewels, precious metals, and finished jewelry containing them) each exceed $50,000. The threshold is per 31 CFR § 1027.100(b)(1).
Once across the threshold, the dealer must implement a written AML program, designate an AML compliance officer, conduct ongoing risk assessment, train relevant personnel, and arrange for independent program review. Cash transactions of $10,000 or more — including aggregated related transactions — must be reported on IRS/FinCEN Form 8300 within 15 days under 31 CFR § 1010.330.
None of this is insurance. The brokerage doesn't draft AML programs — that's the JVC, the dealer's own counsel, or specialty AML consulting firms. But underwriters routinely ask whether the dealer is across threshold and whether the AML program is in place, because regulatory exposure shapes the risk profile of the account.
Dealer Threshold
Annual purchases of covered goods exceeding $50,000 AND annual sales of covered goods exceeding $50,000 — both must be met for the operator to qualify as a "dealer" subject to the AML program rules.
Anti-Money-Laundering Program
Required written program: designated compliance officer, internal policies and procedures, ongoing training, and independent program review. The "four pillars" the FinCEN rule requires.
Form 8300 Reporting
Cash transactions of $10,000+, including aggregated related transactions, reported on IRS Form 8300 within 15 days of the transaction. Applies broadly across cash-intensive trades.
Sanctions Screening
Separate but related — dealers should screen consignor and buyer counterparties against OFAC Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list and other sanctioned-party rolls before higher-value transactions.
The FinCEN guidance for the jewelry industry is consolidated in the agency's "Anti-Money Laundering Program and Suspicious Activity Reporting Requirements For Dealers in Precious Metals, Stones, or Jewels". JVC also publishes free industry guides covering the implementation playbook.
Pages that sit beside a consignment jewelry file.
A consignment jewelry placement frequently intersects with three clusters in the KIG library: the broader jewelry and watch vertical, the fashion industry cluster, and the core coverage lines that sit underneath every commercial account.
// JEWELRY · WATCH · GEM CLUSTER
// FASHION INDUSTRY CLUSTER
// CORE COVERAGE LINES & REFERENCE
Questions consignment dealers ask first.
What's the difference between memo and consignment for our insurance?
UCC § 9-102(a)(20), most memo transactions in the jewelry trade meet the statutory definition of "consignment" — delivery of $1,000+ in goods to a merchant who deals in goods of that kind and isn't generally known by creditors to sell others' goods. For insurance, what matters is that the dealer holds the goods as bailee with title remaining with the supplier or consignor. The policy form has to respond to property of others with proper valuation, sub-limits, and per-consignor scheduling.Does our policy cover pieces in transit between us and consignors?
USPS Registered Mail remains the high-value shipping standard, with per-item declared-value insurance up to USPS's program limits; for shipments exceeding those limits, the operator's in-transit coverage responds. FedEx Custom Critical and Brink's are common for multi-piece or trade-show shipments. The carrier expects documented procedures for tendering shipments — packaging standards, declared-value protocols, addressee verification.What happens to consignor goods if our store files for bankruptcy?
UCC § 9-515, the consignor's interest is generally protected from the store's general creditors. The Jewelers Board of Trade introduced an automated UCC-1 filing service for member dealers in 2021 precisely because so many consignor relationships had operated for years without proper perfection. Without a UCC-1 in place, the consignor may be treated as a general unsecured creditor and the goods may become part of the bankruptcy estate.What does "agreed value" mean for our coverage?
Are we subject to FinCEN AML rules?
31 CFR § 1027.100(b)(1) and must implement a written AML program. Required elements include a designated compliance officer, internal policies and procedures, ongoing training, and independent program review. The $10,000+ cash transaction reporting on IRS Form 8300 under 31 CFR § 1010.330 applies to most cash-intensive businesses regardless of AML threshold. The Jewelers Vigilance Committee publishes implementation guides for the trade.What do the FTC Jewelry Guides require us to disclose?
16 CFR Part 23, last revised in 2018, require accurate disclosure of grade, treatment, origin, and composition for diamond, gemstone, pearl, and precious-metal products. Treatments to gemstones must be disclosed under § 23.24 when the treatment is not permanent, creates special care requirements, or has a significant effect on the stone's value. Diamond treatments are covered under § 23.14 (which directs back to § 23.24). The 2018 revisions added pearl treatment disclosure (§ 23.26) and tightened rules on rhodium-plating disclosure. The Jewelers Vigilance Committee publishes a free Essential Guide series covering implementation.What credentials do underwriters look for in our appraisal staff?
What physical security do underwriters expect?
TL-15, TL-30, or TRTL-30x6 depending on values — for after-hours stock, a UL-certified central-station-monitored alarm system at UL Grade 2 or better, CCTV coverage on the showroom floor and back-of-house, dual control on opening/closing procedures for higher peak limits, and documented bag-check and inventory-reconciliation procedures. Operations with peak aggregates above $2M are typically evaluated against the standards in the JBP underwriting playbooks used by the jewelry-block specialty carriers.Do trade shows require their own coverage?
What if we operate primarily online?
What if we've been declined or non-renewed by another carrier?
How long does the submission process take?
Start the consignment jewelry submission.
Open the intake portal, or schedule a discovery call to walk through the inventory model, peak aggregate, consignor roster, FTC compliance posture, and AML status before any paperwork moves. Clean submissions reach first carrier indication within five to ten business days.
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