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Persian Rug Buying Guide: How to Spot Authentic vs Fake

Learn the six tests that distinguish a genuine Persian rug from a machine-made imitation — pile, knots, back, dyes, smell, and provenance.

MWR
Master Weaver Raju
·February 19, 2026·4 min read·961 words
Persian Rug Buying Guide: How to Spot Authentic vs Fake

"Persian rug" is the most misused term in the carpet trade. It has become a generic descriptor for any rug with a traditional floral or medallion pattern — regardless of where it was made, how it was made, or what it is made of. As a result, buyers pay premium prices for products that are machine-made in China or Belgium, never touched by a weaver's hands, and worth a fraction of what an authentic Persian rug commands.

This guide gives you six concrete tests you can apply before buying.

What "Persian Rug" Actually Means

Strictly speaking, a Persian rug is a hand-knotted carpet woven in Iran (historically Persia). Cities like Tabriz, Isfahan, Kashan, Qom, and Kerman are the major weaving centres, each with its own distinctive pattern vocabulary, colour palette, and knotting tradition.

More broadly, the term has come to describe the Persian weaving tradition — hand-knotted rugs using the Turkish (Ghiordes) or Persian (Senneh) knot, with traditional botanical or geometric motifs. By this wider definition, rugs from India (especially Bhadohi and Agra) that follow the Persian weaving tradition are legitimately called "Persian-style" — and they are often of comparable or superior quality at lower prices. See our [Bhadohi vs Kashmiri comparison](/blog/bhadohi-vs-kashmiri-carpets-comparison) for more on Indian weaving traditions.

Test 1: Examine the Back

Flip the rug over. On a hand-knotted rug, the back looks almost identical to the front — you can see the individual knots, the pattern is clearly visible, and the underside has texture. Machine-made rugs have a canvas or latex backing with the pattern glued or woven through; the back looks like a blank canvas or shows an obviously mechanical grid.

What to look for: Individual knots tied around warp threads, visible on the back surface. Slight irregularities are a good sign — human weavers are not machines.

Test 2: Count the Knots

Turn the rug face-down and count the knots per square inch on the back. Use a magnifying glass or loupe if needed. In a genuine hand-knotted rug:

  • 80–100 KPSI: Good everyday quality
  • 150–250 KPSI: Fine quality, detailed patterns possible
  • 300–500 KPSI: Museum-grade work, found in Qom silks and finest Kashans
  • Under 40 KPSI: Either a hand-tufted rug (legitimate but lower value) or a machine-made rug

See our detailed [knot density guide](/blog/understanding-knot-density-kpsi) for more.

Test 3: The Pile Separation Test

Part the pile with your fingers and look at the base. In a hand-knotted rug, each tuft of pile comes from a knot tied around the warp — the pile is anchored at the base. In a hand-tufted rug, the pile is punched through a canvas backing and held in place with latex; you will see a fabric back glued onto the underside to cover the latex.

In a machine-made rug, the pile is woven through the backing in a regular mechanical pattern with no individual knot wrapping.

Test 4: Check for Slight Imperfections

Authentic hand-knotted rugs have gentle irregularities in the pile, the fringe, and occasionally in the pattern itself. These are not defects — they are evidence of human craftsmanship. The fringe on a genuine rug is an extension of the warp threads, not sewn on separately.

Check the fringe: on a genuine rug, pull a fringe strand and trace it into the body of the rug — it should be continuous with the rug's foundation. On a fake or machine-made rug, the fringe is stitched on and will pull away separately.

Test 5: The Smell Test

Natural wool has a mild lanolin smell, particularly when new or slightly damp. Genuine wool rugs do not smell of chemicals. If the rug has a strong solvent or chemical smell, it may have been treated with chemical washing to artificially antique it, or the pile may be synthetic. Viscose (art silk) and polypropylene have no natural smell but also have no natural warmth to the touch.

Test 6: Ask for Provenance

A reputable dealer should be able to tell you: - Where the rug was woven (city or region) - Approximate age - Knot type (Turkish or Persian knot) - Pile material (wool, silk, or blend)

If the seller cannot or will not answer these questions, treat that as a red flag.

The Indian "Persian" Rug: Legitimate and Often Superior

Much of the world's finest Persian-tradition hand-knotted carpet production now happens in Bhadohi and Agra, India — not in Iran. Indian weavers adopted Persian patterns and knotting techniques centuries ago, and the quality in top Bhadohi workshops matches or exceeds contemporary Iranian production in most quality metrics.

At AJAYPEE CARPET, we have been weaving Persian-tradition hand-knotted carpets in Bhadohi since 1987, exporting OEKO-TEX certified pieces to 40+ countries. Every rug we produce is fully traceable to the workshop and weaver team.

Explore our [Persian-style collection](/rugs/persian) or [hand-knotted rugs](/rugs/hand-knotted) — all can be verified against these tests.

Summary: Quick-Reference Checklist

Before paying for a "Persian rug," verify: - Back looks like the front — pattern visible, knots countable ✓ - Fringe is continuous with warp — not stitched on ✓ - Pile parts to show individual knots — not a tufted canvas ✓ - Slight natural irregularities present — not machine-perfect ✓ - Natural smell — not chemical ✓ - Seller can state origin and KPSI — not evasive ✓

If a rug fails three or more of these, look elsewhere.

Final Thoughts

Authentic hand-knotted rugs — whether from Iran, India, Turkey, or Morocco — are worth the premium. They are generational purchases that appreciate with care. The key is buying from a traceable source and knowing the six tests above.

If you are ready to invest in a verified, direct-from-loom hand-knotted rug, visit our [products page](/products) or contact us through [custom orders](/custom-orders).

Tags:Buying GuidesHandmade CarpetsBhadohiAJAYPEE CARPET

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I tell if a Persian rug is authentic?

Flip it over: a genuine hand-knotted Persian rug has the exact same pattern visible on the back, formed by individual knot bumps. The colours on the back are slightly faded compared to the front. If the back shows a glued fabric or canvas, it is machine-made or hand-tufted, not authentic. Also check: irregular pile height (hand work is never perfectly uniform), fringe growing from the warp (not sewn on), and slight colour variation (abrash) in hand-dyed rugs.

Are Persian rugs from India authentic?

Yes. 'Persian rug' refers to a design tradition and weaving technique, not exclusively to rugs made in Iran. India — particularly Bhadohi, Agra, and Jaipur — has been making Persian-design hand-knotted rugs since the Mughal era (16th century). Indian-made Persian-design rugs are fully authentic hand-knotted pieces and often comparable in quality to Iranian production.

How much does a genuine Persian rug cost?

A genuine hand-knotted Persian-design wool carpet in 6×9 ft starts at $500–$800 from a manufacturer in India. The same rug through a Western importer or retailer sells for $2,000–$5,000+. Iranian-made Persian rugs typically command a premium. Large, fine, or antique pieces can run into tens of thousands of dollars.

What is the difference between a Persian and an Oriental carpet?

All Persian carpets are Oriental, but not all Oriental carpets are Persian. 'Oriental' refers to any hand-knotted carpet from Asia (Iran, India, Turkey, China, Afghanistan, Morocco). 'Persian' specifically refers to carpets made in the Persian weaving tradition — characterised by floral medallion, arabesque, and garden motifs — regardless of country of origin.

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