Baldur's Gate 3: 16 Things You Should Always Sell (2024)

Highlights

  • Make sure to sell off common items like rotten food and paintings to earn some quick cash in Baldur's Gate 3.
  • Keep spell scrolls for combat but sell duplicates, heavy weapons, and useless items like ropes and utensils.
  • Gems are valuable and lightweight, making them a great item to collect and sell for huge profits in the game.

Baldur's Gate 3 has raked numerous awards and critical acclaim since its official launch in 2023, and players are still finding new secrets and hidden treasures as they adventure across the Storm Coast. With every new location they discover, adventurers collect all sorts of unique resources and miscellaneous items that fill up their inventory and eventually over-encumber them.

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Any merchant will gladly take these items off the players' hands, giving the party's coffers or camp supplies either gold in exchange or by way of bartering, each of which depends on the character's Charisma stat. Even while they're lost on the crashing Nautiloid, before they've gained a single level, characters are likely to find plenty of things to sell.

Updated July 20, 2024, by Kristy Ambrose: Less than a year after the game was officially launched, Baldur's Gate 3 has won several awards with a few more still pending. Although Larian CEO Sven Vicke has announced there won't be any sequels or DLCs, that doesn't mean there won't be any new updates or patches. We may get even more stuff to fill those adventuring packs and haul to the nearest vendor, but in the meantime, there's plenty to find in the game already. Some characters might decide to collect and even hoard certain items depending on their background, class, or other personal details, and some of these items make for a great way to earn some quick cash by selling them off to merchants.

16 Rotten Food

Unless You Want To Restore It, It's Useless

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  • Found In: Abandoned homes, shelters, campsites, and any container labeled as "rotten."

While unspoiled food and camp supplies will allow a player to rest so that they can regain their spell slots or hit points, players are also likely to find an abundance of rotten food on their travels. These foods can't be used for camp supplies due to their foul state, but certain putrid things like rotten eggs and lemons can be thrown at enemies for some AoE damage if that's something the character would do.

This is an item that players can freely sell to a merchant, although it's a surprise that they would even accept such an item, but this is an RPG and vendors have a reputation for buying anything. In some cases, it may be better to simply leave the rotten food on the ground as the amount of gold received from selling this isn't a lot.

15 Paintings

A Common And Valuable Black Market Item

Baldur's Gate 3: 16 Things You Should Always Sell (3)
  • Found In: Thieves hideouts, various homes or businesses, caches, and hoards

There are a lot of paintings in the game for some reason, and they appear as puzzles, decorations, or quest items, and often, the player can pick them up. A popular decorative item for those that like to beautify their campsite, many of them are also very valuable and it's often better to sell them.

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Some of the paintings in the game have interesting or funny descriptions, and others contain Easter eggs that reference other Larian Studios games. It's understandable to keep a few paints either as decor or for nostalgia, but the fact that they're heavy, big, and expensive means that players are better off selling them.

14 Weapons With A Bonus

There Are Plenty Of Better Ones Anyway

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  • Found In: Locked chests, looted from bodies, some uncommon places like pulled from chunks of meat

Uncommon or rare quality weapons with a +1 or +2 bonus to their damage turn up in the game every so often. A famous example is the Dagger +1 that you can pull from a chunk of meat hanging over a fire north of the Blighted Village. The campfire is on a little hill, and it's easy to miss if the party stays on the road.

Get a strong character or one with a good Sleight of Hand proficiency to pull it out, because it requires a saving throw to get it. It's a nice dagger for the beginning of the game, but without any extra abilities, it becomes obsolete fairly quickly. Sell it, and any others like it, because it's worth more than a Common quality weapon, and much better weapons are coming soon.

13 Body Parts

Unless You Have Other Plans

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  • Found In: Hospitals, temples, morgues, and various places in the sewers

The exception to this rule would be the various bits of Dribbles the Clown that Lucretia sends the party to find and collect. However, that's a quest for Act 3, which also has the bloody venues of the Temple of Bhaal and the Murder Tribunal, and the party will be looting plenty of human remains before then.

Why a character would even pick this sort of thing up is beside the point, and it's possible to roleplay it in some interesting ways for an evil character like the Dark Urge. In addition to being numerous and messy, body parts are also heavy, and encumbrance is something RPG players are always trying to avoid. Keep a few as decor or a midnight snack, but sell most of them before they weigh the party down.

12 Books

Keep A Few, But Sell The Rest

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  • Found In: Shelves, houses, shops, and any private living or study quarters

There are several quest-related books in the game, and these are usually marked with an orange border and description title to keep the player from selling or storing them should they still be required. On the other hand, the vast majority of the books that a player finds won't have any use, aside from learning a bit of Sword Coast lore and getting the Bookworm Achievement in Steam.

Another possible use would be to drop these books in a certain corner of the campsite as decoration, but even in that case, there's still going to be a lot of these. Sell them to a vendor after reading them to make a few extra coins.

Valuable And Plentiful Throughout The Game

Baldur's Gate 3: 16 Things You Should Always Sell (8)
  • Found In: Bookcases, chests, looted from dead enemies, and vendors

Spell scrolls are incredibly useful in combat due to them allowing other classes to use spells in a pinch. With a single-use item, once a spell scroll has been used in or out of battle, it is gone for good unless the player finds another that does the same spell. Players are likely to want to keep every spell scroll they find, although there are some exceptions to this rule, like finding spell scrolls of Rare or Very Rare quality.

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Scrolls that do identical spells to the ones already used by the party's spellcasters can be easily sold as it's unlikely that a player will need duplicates of this type of spell unless they want to be able to cast it without using a spell slot. These scrolls also have little weight to them, which means the player can collect a lot before selling them to a merchant.

10 Vases

They Are The Loot

Baldur's Gate 3: 16 Things You Should Always Sell (10)
  • Found In: Homes, ruins, settlements, thieves' caches, and campsites

There's a running joke about the vast amount of crockery in Baldur's Gate in the form of vases. Players can search these for loot, but they're always empty. However, some of the more decorative ones can be very valuable if the players or a companion is strong enough to carry them.

Sell them or keep them at camp depending on their value, but there are so many it's best to sell them. Even the humble clay vases are worth at least one or two gold, but should the player require more storage options at camp, it might be worth keeping them instead.

9 Jewelry With No Enchantments

Unless You're Into This Sort Of Thing

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  • Found in: Chests, safes, lockboxes, looted from dead enemies

Unlike the rotten food that will hardly make the player any money, an easy way to earn some cash is by selling the jewelry that is commonly found in chests or on the corpses of defeated foes. A player might want to keep one or two rings or necklaces with magical properties for Gale to devour. Depending on the materials used to make these rings and necklaces, they could be sold at a merchant for different prices.

This isn't even considering the attitude the merchant has towards the player which can also change how much more or less a merchant is willing to trade for the jewelry. They also weigh next to nothing, which means players can carry plenty of rings from their adventures before finally returning to civilization to sell their collection.

8 Rope

Not As Useful As The Real Thing

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  • Found In: Supply crates, campsites, thief caches, chests, and many other places.

Rope is an item that players might keep or even collect at first, thinking that it might be something their character can use in the game. Rock climbing, restraining enemies, or making shelters However, it's just part of the immersion factor and isn't even something that can decorate the player's camp.

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It's not expensive, and there aren't different or better types that sell for more, but it still takes up as much bag space. It's much better to sell it and turn it into something like gold, which is at least useful even if it's not plentiful.

7 Home Decor

Used For The Campsite, But It's Valuable To Vendors

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  • Found in: Shelves and cupboards of private houses, either used or abandoned, or businesses like taverns or hostels.

Bits of rope, paintings, and maybe even small pieces of furniture like chairs and stools make up some of the clutter found in Baldur's Gate 3. They carry no purpose other than to fill the world with things to make chests and tables feel not as empty, but you can always sell that landscape painting or fancy chair and make some gold out of it.

Those who like to select 'Take All' when searching through boxes or people may find that a good third of their inventory is taken up by these pointless household items. Thankfully, it's safe to sell these to any merchant as long as none of them are stolen, then it's better to use a fence.

6 Utensils

Take The Silverware

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  • Found In: Private homes or businesses such as taverns, bars, restaurants, and inns, also found in tombs, temples, and chapels

This is a classic thieving item that's found in copious amounts throughout the game, and in a variety of different qualities. The cups, spoons, and bowls you find scattered through the wilderness are made of simple stone or wood and aren't worth very much, but bigger homes and locked chests and wardrobes often contain more valuable utensils.

Goblets, serving platters, and sometimes forks, knives, and spoons will turn up, and these are much more ornate and often made of bronze, silver, or gold. It might be nice to display a few at camp, depending on the kind of character you're playing, but these sell for anywhere from 20g and up, so it's better to sell them.

5 Green Gear And Armor

Gale Only Needs To Consume Three

Baldur's Gate 3: 16 Things You Should Always Sell (16)
  • Found in: Various chests and on dead enemies

While many of the items that players can happily sell hardly take up any weight in the player's inventory, the items that weigh the heaviest, such as armor or weapons, are likely to give the most coin. These items are plentiful in Act 1 of Baldur's Gate 3.

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After moving on to Act 2, which has more and better quality items, players won't want to pick up every bow or sword they see, but grabbing a couple just to get the coins to flow is never a bad idea. If a player can't see themselves ever using it in the future, there is no point keeping it in the camp chest when it could be raising money for the next bit of armor.

They Only Look Useful

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  • Found in: Farms, stables, gardens, workshops, and sheds, and sold by tradespeople and blacksmiths.

With some exceptions, the hammers, tongs, and tool sets that the character can pick up are just for immersion and decor and can't be used. It's easy to forget that there isn't a crafting option in BG3 since it's a feature that virtually all games have these days, but there's no point in picking up these things other than selling them.

The pitchfork is one tool that the character might want to keep, just because it's fun to equip one, but it can also be used to search through a haystack. A shovel, on the other hand, is essential for digging up those hidden chests, and every character in the party should have one.

3 Common Notes

Fun Souvenirs Become Useless Clutter

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  • Found In: Cluttered offices and homes, bookshelves, looted from enemies

The party will come across loose papers and notes of all kinds during their adventures. Some of them contain crucial information for quests, puzzles, or hidden items, while others are just part of the immersion process. The Wizard's Tower in the Underdark, which contains several loose papers with lines of poetry, for example.

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There are a lot of them, starting with the letters that players can pick up on the beach by the Nautiloid. They can pile up and fill the inventory with useless junk, so it's better to sell them. Anything important will have a bright orange border and likely won't be accepted by a vendor anyway.

2 Ingots

In A Game With No Crafting, They're Found Money

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  • Found in: Locked chests, crates, or storage spaces near any mining or blacksmithing equipment

There are a couple of exceptions to this rule for quest and character-related items. Any adamantine that can be used in the Adamantine Forge, or the Infernal Iron that Karlach can use to power her Infernal Engine, should never leave the player's inventory.

10:26

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Iron, gold, silver, or bronze ingots will turn up in a variety of places throughout the game, and it seems strange because they can't be used for anything. Nobody is talking about adding more crafting options to the game, so it's something that the player should always sell. Ingots may be heavy, but they can be valuable depending on the material, making their weight worth it in the end.

1 Gems

Collect And Sell For Huge Profits

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  • Found in: Often behind a lock, either on a chest, door, or vault. Also looted from corpses.

Out of all the items a player can collect in Baldur's Gate 3, one of the safest options for players to sell, no matter the circ*mstances, are gems. These are another common junk item to be found across the Storm Coast, but it's unlike the usual clutter found due to gems being lightweight and selling for a large amount of coin.

A few exceptions that the player should keep are connected to quests, like the amethyst that opens the Necromany of Thay book. Others can be rare to find, especially when it comes to more valuable stones like diamonds, and therefore, any gem found is a welcome sight.

Baldur's Gate 3: 16 Things You Should Always Sell (24)
Baldur's Gate 3

RPG

Platform(s)
PC , macOS , PS5 , Xbox Series X

Released
August 3, 2023
Developer(s)
Larian Studios
Baldur's Gate 3: 16 Things You Should Always Sell (2024)

FAQs

Baldur's Gate 3: 16 Things You Should Always Sell? ›

Make sure to sell off common items like rotten food and paintings to earn some quick cash in Baldur's Gate 3. Keep spell scrolls for combat but sell duplicates, heavy weapons, and useless items like ropes and utensils.

What shouldn't I sell BG3? ›

  • 6 Food. Your player will need a lot of rest in Baldur's Gate 3. ...
  • 5 Magic Scrolls. These allow your party members to cast spells no matter their class. ...
  • 4 Quest Items. ...
  • 3 Elemental Arrows. ...
  • 2 Potions. ...
  • 1 Useful Magic Items.
Aug 27, 2023

What items should I keep in Baldur's Gate 3? ›

  • 10 Candles. Candles can be found everywhere in Baldur's Gate 3 in boxes, bags and chests. ...
  • 9 Shovel. ...
  • 8 Githyanki Egg. ...
  • 7 Salami. ...
  • 6 Thieves Tools & Trap Disarm Toolkits. ...
  • 5 Wyvern Poison. ...
  • 4 Water Bottles & Jugs. ...
  • 3 Dark Amethyst.
Aug 23, 2023

Should I keep or sell ingots BG3? ›

Ingots and gems in Baldur's Gate 3 are mostly useless and should be sold to vendors for their gold value. There are a few exceptions, such as Infernal Iron needed for Karlach's quest and Mithral Ore for crafting rare gear at the Adamantine forge.

Should I sell all books in BG3? ›

it is a good idea to take a look at them as soon as you pick them up in order to kick off any side quests that might be linked to the item. After that, there is little reason to hold on to them. Sell your books to merchants once you've flipped through them and then use that gold for something more useful!

Should I sell the Infernal Iron BG3? ›

Unfortunately, there is no current use for the Enriched Infernal Iron to create better armor or help Karlach. You can sell it for a pretty decent price at shops around Baldur's Gate. Its value can be enhanced by selling it with high Persuasion characters.

Can you be evil in BG3? ›

1: Yes, going evil will have some companions leave you (specifically Karlach, Wyll, and Gale... though I think you can persuade Gale into staying.). In return you do get a couple evil companions. 2: While it is entirely possible to do an evil playthrough, doing so cuts out a massive portion of the game's content.

What items to sell in Baldurs Gate 3? ›

While many of the items that players can happily sell hardly take up any weight in the player's inventory, the items that weigh the heaviest, such as armor or weapons, are likely to give the most coin. These items are plentiful in Act 1 of Baldur's Gate 3.

Should I keep Legendary books BG3? ›

Not every book in Baldur's Gate 3 is worth selling or throwing as an improvised weapon, and since knowledge is power, it's best to learn the most important books within Baldur's Gate 3 so that not only are players invested deeper into the lovingly crafted lore, but also to obtain more power.

Is Bloodstone useful in BG3? ›

A Bloodstone is a common Gemstone, primarily of use for bartering, or sale to Traders. Anyone can squeeze blood from a stone if the edges are sharp enough.

Are pearls useful in BG3? ›

A Pearl is a common Gemstone, primarily of use for bartering, or sale to Traders.

Is Infernal iron used for anything in BG3? ›

Infernal Iron is a metal superficially similar to iron that is produced in the Nine Hells. It is used to manufacture all kinds of infernal-touched items, such as the Helldusk set. This dented piece of black metal has a red shine to it, no matter the lighting.

What does the Owlbear egg do in BG3? ›

Use The Owlbear Egg As A Camp Supply

While this is not a recommended use for the Owlbear Egg, the item can help facilitate a Long Rest in Baldur's Gate 3. In fact, the Owlbear Egg will be put directly into the Camp Supply Sack, and players should take care not to use it when performing a Long Rest.

What to not sell in BG3? ›

Orange items, soul coins, and high-level spell scrolls should never be sold - they are crucial for progression and survival.

What is the max level in BG3? ›

Baldur's Gate 3 is based on Dungeons & Dragons 5e but has a maximum level of 12, not the tabletop RPG's maximum level of 20. Expansion of the level cap is unlikely. Higher-level spells and stronger villains in late-game DnD make it challenging to continue Baldur's Gate 3 past level 12 in a video game format.

Who is the best merchant in Baldur's Gate 3? ›

Lann Tarv is one of the very best merchants Baldur's Gate 3 has to offer, if only because players can gain a large, quick and relatively easy discount almost as soon as they meet him in Act Two.

What items are junk in BG3? ›

Most everything has a use. Unless it's nonmagical equipment (armor, weapons, jewellery) or clearly art (gems, paintings) it'll most likely have a use somewhere in the game... so save those metal bars, ingredients and soul coins.

Should I keep scrolls in BG3? ›

Scrolls are an important, but often neglected, aspect of Dungeons and Dragons and Baldur's Gate 3. Many players hoard their scrolls. They save them for a tough fight, but for many players, no fight ever seems tough enough to justify using a one-shot item.

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