Platinum(II) acetate is a purple-colored coordination complex. Unlike the corresponding palladium complex, it is not commercially available. Platinum(II) acetylacetonate has been used in its place as a starting point into platinum chemistry.
Several syntheses of platinum(II) acetate have been reported. For example, G. Wilkinson et al. reported a synthesis which involved dissolving sodium hexahydroxyplatinate in nitric acid, heating with acetic acid, and removing excess nitric acid by reduction with formic acid. However, Wilkinson's group reported great variability in the results of this synthesis.
In a more recent synthesis by M. Basato et al., silver acetate was reacted with platinum(II) chloride. Silver(I) is used as a halide-abstraction reagent. The product formed was tetrameric, complexed with two acetic acid molecules.