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Coin Collection Values of OLD coins
I was curious if there were any coin collectors out there, or some with some knowledge / advice.
My Mom was just cleaning out her Safety Deposit Box, and said "here, you can have these.........." I just received Lots and LOTS of old old old US and Canadian coins, uncircultated coin sets, uncirculated paper bills. So many I don't even know how to start counting them all. Or assessing their value. Oldest coin I've found is 1809, cents/half-cents, several mid 1800's, misc Liberty silver dollars, Kennedy 1964 Silver 50 cent pieces, Wheat Pennies, Bufallo nickles, Un-circulated coin sets from the 1960's 1970's, 1980's.............you get the idea. Paper Currency of all ages and denomination, some uncirculated, oldest bill is 1917 and I haven't even really dug through them all yet. Some Postage Stamps and Foriegn currency too. To be honest, I'm over-whelmed. Yeah I can go out to Ebay to get a market idea, but I really need to get these accurately valued by a coin collector or buyer. this calls for professionals...............hence, grins, why I turn to Pelicanites first. I'm very hesitant to go into a pawn shop / gold buying / coin shop in town, or at least if I do, I have to build some trust and "relationship" with them at a repuatable professional firm. I'm not going to just dump 100-200 misc coins on their counter and say I'll be back in a couple days. Man I almost need an inventory system or check list saying "this is what I dropped off" give every one back or make me a fair offer. Or just do several small batches at a time, so nothing goes "missing", or sit down with the store manager for 1-2 hours at a time and go piece by piece? I guess its sort of like selling Baseball cards, I have several shoe boxes worth, but don't know if someones rookie card is worth 5 cents, 50 cents, $5, or $50+? It's amazing what the pelican brain trust can provide with advice and wisdom. what do you all suggest on how to handle this situation? I've got a lot of inventory to process, and this old currency should be appreciated by someone, a collector, or just sold off for rare coin market value, and not just stored in my safety deposit box at the bank gathering dust. THANKS, this simply just isn't my field or area of interest or expertise. SmileWavy SmileWavy SmileWavy |
There are lots of books that contain price lists. Stop by pretty much any book store and pick one up. They should probably only be used as a rough guideline, but should tell you if you're looking at a coin worth 50¢ or potentially $50
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wide buy vs sell values in shops
avoid the gold buyer they want to pay scrap value and any old usa / can coin is worth way over scrap x2 or x3 dates are the key as is mint mark and condition pick up a coin value book price numbers are off but it will clue you to whats rare for real rare valuable coin a PRO GRADE is worth the money |
Yup, books and some generic websites give a book value, but honestly I don't know the differnce between Good, Very Good, Very Very Good conditions, and then some coins from one Mint, say Denver, is maybe worth double what another is worth.
I honestly don't have the time to look every single coin/bill up in a book, I guess regarldess of age, a $20 dollar bill, will always be worth $20............ |
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Most older silver dollars are worth at least $50 if not more. The older coins are well worth saving and Fleabay should give you a good idea of what they are worth... |
gold certs far more then silver cert bills
rare mint marks like CC or O any book will have condition grade values charts grades matter have any high value coins PRO graded mint sets are VALUABLE as are UNCERK mint coins |
dealer auctions ?
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Recently sold a 1833 quarter, 1848 dime, and 1867 nickle on a gun forum for $75 including insured shipping. They were in what is apparently called "Good" condition, buyer was happy as was I.
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Do the coins change value with the value of the underlying material or are they far enough above that they don't change from day to day?
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It can be worth your while to look up current prices of coins.
This will give you a rough idea of what the coins are worth......selling them for the listed price is another kettle of fish. There should be no rush so take your time. Peace Dollars - US Coin Prices and Values I found myself in a similar situation a few years back. Like in most things, knowledge is power. |
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Silver coins are worth around 25-30 (or a lot more) times their face value. A 20$ gold double eagle (one oz)is somewhere north of $4-5K depending on condition. If you really want to get an idea, punch up that link I posted. Coins have a huge following on evilbay. If RHeap has liberty silver dollars he has landed in fat city. |
Hire a reputable appraiser. I just did this recently.
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I buy and sell coins every day. Given $1700 gold and $33 silver:
Common silver coins (not dollars) Buy @ .65 cents/gram Sell .85 (easier than counting) Common silver dollars, good/extra fine Buy $27 Sell $32 Common $20 gold piece Buy $1700 Sell $1780 (they don't contain an oz of gold btw) Something the seller thinks is rare gets priced individually. I don't mess with paper currency, not as easy to sell. As far as an appraiser goes, is that like getting jewelry appraised? Don't tell me what something is worth, I'd rather you tell me what you'll give for it. Jim |
Perfectly said Jim, thanks for your input.
I'll post a couple pics soon. Very cool to just feel the vibe from a 1809 coin, and that it's over 200+ years old and wondering who's hands and life stories it's past through. I dunno, it's more than the metal coin, and makes you reflect a bit. |
I'm not trying to steal anyone's stuff Dave, just prepping you for what you may find out there.
I'd certainly advise you to keep at least a few coins that have some appeal to you. And unless you have things that need paying off to keep ALL the gold coins (and really, all the common silver too). I think they're better than paper money. That's what I'm doing. Jim |
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and USA silver coins are worth far more then scrap |
Whatever you do, DON'T clean them in any way.
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Why would anyone sell heirlooms such as this? When your parents are gone, these coins will be a connection to them. That's not worth all the money in the world, imho...
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