Gold Capped: The fastest way to make 10,000 gold

Every so often, I get asked something to the effect of "What's the fastest way to get 10,000 gold?" It's usually asked by someone who is perpetually poor in game and is looking to get a BoE or some other sort of reward that costs gold. The fastest way for me to get 10,000 gold is to log in and check my mail. My daily haul is many times that and scales based on how much time I have to craft, list, and relist. This isn't a useful answer to someone who lives paycheck to paycheck, though. So what advice would be helpful?
First off, if you're below level 85, get to level 85. This nets you quite a bit of gold simply from quest rewards and vendoring gear you acquire. If you're already level 85, the first thing you need to do is identify how much money you can make per hour running 5-mans for valor points that you can use to sell BoEs. On my realm, I could sell a BoE costing 1,650 VPs for about 10,000 gold. That means every valor point I earn could be worth 6 gold, which makes the 150 points I get from a 5-man worth 900g. I can do seven per week per character with the requisite gear. Also, every trash kill and boss kill has a chance of awarding you with valuables, including enchanting mats (if someone can DE) and BoEs.
Downtime between instances
Unless you're queuing as a tank or healer, though, you're going to have significant downtime. What can you do while queued to make money? For starters, professions. Every single profession has something it can do to make money. If you have herbalism, skinning, or mining, farm. Put your goods on the Auction House a little higher than the lowest, but undercut the biggest quantity listed. If you have crafting professions, you can spend your queue time in front of the Auction House trying to find items that you can craft that will get purchased and cost less to make than they'll sell for.
As soon as you're involved in the AH, you will definitely want to replace the base AH interface with Auctionator. It allows you to see on one page how many auctions are at each price. There's no need to manually read each auction and try to work it out for yourself.
Next up, basic arbitrage is something anyone can do while waiting for a queue to pop. Buy something that can be transformed and sold in its new form. For example, Greater Celestial Essences can be turned into Lesser Celestial Essences with a right-click, and these will sometimes sell for more than a third. Some professions can do things like this, too.
- The raw gems obtained from Prospecting just about any type of ore will be worth more than the ore itself.
- The inks obtained from Milling are worth more than the herbs needed to make them.
- The mats obtained from Disenchanting are sometimes worth more than the items you can disenchant.
- Heavy Savage Leather might sell for more than the five Savage Leather it takes to make them.
- Bolts of cloth might sell for more than the cloth itself.
The sunset of profit from dailies
Notice how my advice doesn't include dailies? That's because until you've exhausted your VP gains for the week, queuing for sellable VPs will be way more than anyone can make doing dailies. Daily quests were a viable way of making money when most people thought that 100 gold was a lot. Nowadays, that's one repair bill. Dailies should be done for reputation, gear, or fun, but never money. You can make more gold per hour doing just about anything with a profession than you ever will doing dailies.
The other bad, outdated advice I'd like people to ignore is grinding. Killing lots of monsters is a very low amount of money per hour compared to almost any alternative, unless you're skinning. Even then, all the non-leather you get from skinning is a drop in the bucket compared to how much you get from the leather.
Escaping the cycle
There is a middle ground between being a multimillionaire and being completely broke. There are lots of people who always have 30k to 50k gold around in case they decide to splurge on something, but they don't spend as much time keeping that balance as I do making my millions.
What's the difference between someone who is consistently broke and one of these middle-class players? Believe it or not, I don't think income is much of a factor. I suspect that a large part of the middle class makes money the same way I've outlined here. The biggest difference is how they choose to spend their money.
The best advice I can give someone trying to get out of the grinding for gold cycle is to look very carefully at where you spend your money and decide whether focusing in on what's really important to you would help you achieve your goals. You won't have to have to farm your butt off saving up for a Hagara pick-pocket if you hadn't spent all the gold you made last patch on mounts, vanity pets, and other less important items. Have a minimum balance in mind, and until you're at that level, don't spend anything.
The reality is that most people don't bother with gold making because there really isn't much you can do with it. But if you treat the 10k (or 30k or 50k) gold mark as your zero balance, then you'll be able to splurge every time something new comes out.
Filed under: Economy, Gold Capped






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
RG Jan 6th 2012 3:14PM
I'd posit that most people spend gold in game like they spend money in real life - spend more than they earn. Fortunately you can't spend more than you earn in game so never go into debt but they never build up wealth (in this case 10k spending money) either.
Great post oh in-game money guru.
Eladonra Jan 6th 2012 4:56PM
My ingame spending is different than my real life spending. I spend money more freely in real life. I'm incredibly frugal in WoW. I have plenty of gold and no particular goal of how to spend it. I have 2 miners, an alchemist, and a jewelcrafter. I can't bring myself to put red gems into my alt's gear. I already own the gems - so it is losing potential profit vs actively spending money. But my inner penny pincher keeps piping up "This toon only does LFR; does she really need that extra 20 intellect when you could make 400g selling it?" So purple and orange it is!
Tanddori Jan 6th 2012 5:39PM
See, I'm the exact opposite. I'm quite money conscious in real life, but in game I spend like it's going out of business.
"Oh, there's a vial of the sands on for 5k cheaper than what I usually see it listed. I guess my 4th 85 could have it".
Buy out. Learn. Ta-dah!
WoW gold is easy to make and I have no reason to save.
robsmith77 Jan 6th 2012 6:10PM
I'm with Tanddori, I splurge the cash in-game but in real-life I'm quite a bit more careful!
My weakness is for Blacksmithing plans, I just gotta have 'em all and if they cost 5k, 10k, 20k then so be it.
Twill Jan 6th 2012 9:31PM
Yea. Frugal in-game because of the loss of potential profit over enchanting an alts gear.
Always gets me.
kabshiel Jan 6th 2012 10:08PM
I need an in-game credit card.
goldeneye Jan 9th 2012 4:05PM
There's only one thing I'd deem worth it to splurge on: Vial of the Sands
Common, it turns you into a dragon people !
AND you can carry someone !
In my book, this beats any piece of BoE gear.
The only question is, will it be for:
- my Druid (can already become a flying creature, but shapeshifting = for druids !!)
- my DK (wants to shapeshift too !! and is my currently most played char this xpack, but it seems out of place for a creature of undeath to become a dragon...)
But that'll be a conflict of luxury to settle :-)
Namssob Jan 6th 2012 3:24PM
Nice article, Basil, and good advice! Nice basic article to get people going making gold, espeically in a couple ways people don't generally think about.
v Jan 7th 2012 2:06AM
To the list of "ways people don't generally think about", I'd add soloing old raids for the classes that can do it. My prot paladin can solo a bunch of them, but just to give an example, the hour or so it takes to solo 4/6 bosses in Serpentshire nets me 1000g on boss gold alone (trash and selling loot adds even more). It's less gold per hour than farming VPs, but it's nothing to scoff at.
Edymnion Jan 6th 2012 3:26PM
I see my gold in game the same as I see my money in real life. It isn't worth anything unless you spend it. Oh sure, I keep a healthy amount in savings in case my roof blows off or the car explodes, but if you have a million dollars and you're eating ramen every night to pinch pennies, whats the point of having the million dollars?
Same in game. If I've got 50k that I'm not actively saving for something in particular, hell yeah I'll spend it on something for my main or one of my alts. Otherwise its worthless. Literally worthless, as you aren't spending it on anything it has no value, its just pixels on the bottom of your bag.
slim1256 Jan 6th 2012 3:37PM
This is basically my philosophy as well.
I don't spend gold like it's water. I constantly watch for good deals.
But if I want something, I buy it. That's why I bust my hump on the AH making teh golds... so I can buy what I want.
Edymnion Jan 6th 2012 3:48PM
Yup.
A good example, a few weeks ago I got into a DS10 on my rogue and got to pickpocket Hagara (finally). I didn't pay to get in, as I was one of the top DPS anyway (so I carried my weight), got the ring, and when we were done went straight to start up the quests.
10k down the hole, and I was literally broke. As in under 500g spread across all of my toons (a half dozen 85's). Was so bloody broke I couldn't afford to chant/gem my new shinies right away.
So what did I do? I got serious, and within a week I was back up to 15k again. Then I dinged 85 on a new toon, an went on a spree. BoE's, mats to craft PvP gear, etc. I'm back down to about 2k gold again, but my shaman never set foot in a regular or heroic raid, went straight into Twilights.
Again, whats the point of having the gold if you don't spend it to make your in-game life better/easier?
slim1256 Jan 6th 2012 4:01PM
Well, now - I do have a pretty healthy nut of savings, and I try not to go down below that. If I do, it's buying mats that I'm gonna use to craft and flip on the AH. Again, just like in real life - you've got to have money to make money.
The point for me - making money isn't an end. It's a means.
That means is different for everyone - maybe it's to buy pets, or mounts, or epic BOEs... but just having a million gold that you're never gonna do anything with seems pointless to me.
Eyhk Jan 6th 2012 4:09PM
The point is that you want a comfortable amount at "zero" balance. Let's say that amount is 20k~30k. Never spend so that you go below this threshold. Get up to 50k before you splurge on something that drops it down to 20k
If you get 30k and then spend it all on big purchases and your balances go down to 500g, you feel poor and compelled to work to make money, not enjoy the game.
You spent the same 30k in both situations, but one feels like you have more than enough while one makes you feel poor. Just requires a little bit more patience up front.
The Dewd Jan 6th 2012 3:31PM
That's *exactly* what I do. I'm no where near as rich as you guys (I'm just a bit over 100k) but I hardly ever spend it unless I find a really good deal - and generally only pets/mounts since gear is always replaced. When I first hit 50k in Wrath I promised myself that once I had enough money to buy a chopper and _still_ be over 50k, I'd do it - and that's what I did. Once I hit 100k, I refused to allow myself to go under it.
I just wish I had the willingness to spend the time making money like some folks. But I'm comfortable knowing that I have what i have since I'm pretty miserly.
Edymnion Jan 6th 2012 3:42PM
There's only two ways to make money with professions right now.
Jewelcrafting and Alchemy
Red gems in particular are still crazy expensive on my realm (a cut inferno ruby is usually at least 400g), so if you've got a JC and a Miner to support them, you've got money.
Alternatively, be an Alchemist with Elixir Mastery. People are hitting the DS raids constantly right now, which means flasks are selling really well. I can make upwards of 5k overnight on flasks (mainly list them on Wed for 48 hours, so that all the raiders that just have to be in there on Tuesday as soon as the unlock occurs can buy them from you). On my realm again, the flasks tend to go for about the same amount of gold as the materials to make them (if you didn't farm them yourself), but the free procs off elixir mastery are pure profit, and there's nothing better than seeing it proc a x4 craft.
Edymnion Jan 6th 2012 3:49PM
Stupid lack of edit button, list flasks on MONDAY night so they'll be available on Tuesday.
Don Jan 6th 2012 6:39PM
Inscription is probably the most consistent money maker for me. I've gotten over 650k from glyphs. While it's no Glyphmass right now, I still bring in about 5-7k per day from glyphs that take about 30 minutes per day to craft/post.
monotype Jan 6th 2012 3:32PM
I envy you with your 10k boes. Somebody just offered me 3k for VP boots. I was incredulous, until I realized that's what the /tradehawks have reduced it to on Proudmoore.
Hollow Leviathan Jan 6th 2012 3:32PM
There has to have been a more tactful way to mention your wealth inequality in that first paragraph.