Kindly read our FAQs ("Tutorials") before submitting appraisals or inquiries!


We are the only N.Y. traveling dealer with A.N.A. Life Membership, U.S.P.A.P. Ethics, and I.R.S. standards.


Family-friendly appraisals, complimentary for small collections. SHIP INSURED FOR AN OFFER!


Kindly read our FAQs ("Tutorials") before submitting appraisals or inquiries!


We are the only N.Y. traveling dealer with A.N.A. Life Membership, U.S.P.A.P. Ethics, and I.R.S. standards.


Family-friendly appraisals, complimentary for small collections. SHIP INSURED FOR AN OFFER!


Call Today  •  (914) 649-3317  •  (833) THE-COIN  •  (833) 843-2646

ONLINE APPRAISAL

Send a photo of your item or collection for a free online appraisal. You may even decide to sell us your coin or other item when you find out what it is and what it's worth!

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SUBMIT AN ITEM FOR FREE APPRAISAL

We kindly ask you to limit your request to ONE item, preferably with images of both sides. We specialize in items that are older and of some historic importance. Please include photos of both sides if possible.


We may use your appraisal on our site as reference for others with the same item(s). We'll never display your personal information and will remove all sensitive information from your submission. Please contact us for a private appraisal. View our privacy policy.

Most inquiries we get are about circulated coins made after 1971, and/or coins where people mistake post-mint damage and wear for "errors". You can expect us to affirm these are face value. We ask that before you write and submit such questions, to PLEASE first read through our existing postings and our "what it's worth" primers.

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Recent Appraisals

APPRAISALS

Get accurate information on your own collection from a true numismatist.

D. I have a bunch more need help

Not as much help as Lincoln does. Spend them fast.

D. 1973 penny, edge of coin looks a little thin. Front of it is concave. Back side looks lightly blistered. Perfectly round.

Looks like someone gave it a good hit with a hammer. But the fact that it's round suggests maybe it was worn down, ground with something. Could be aliens at work.

D. 1943 penny

You have a rusty wartime steel cent. It's the only U.S. coin you can stick to a magnet. Cool, right? But not worth more than about a nickel.

D. 1982 small and large date both struck on copper planchet. Also other errors. 1960 error coin, 1980 error coin .

Yes many errors. Error error error. Large, small, medium date. Option B: Three cents.

D. 1982 small and large date with errors both on zinc planchets

Let's get this out of the way fast: They made seven cents in 1982. Three are copper, from Denver, Philly, and San Francisco. Three are copper-coated zinc, from the same mints. The seventh is the proof San Francisco issue from a polished die. Now the important part: every 1982 cent I know of, every variety and subvariety, is worth one cent. A hundredth of a dollar. One fifth of a nickel. And so on...

D. 1958 [doubled] wheat penny

1958 [cent]. Give to a kid.

Rare Coin and Currency Consulting

We identify items, determine value, and even make an offer on the spot. We can help you decide what to sell, put at auction, or hold for investment.

Or call us now to discuss your items
(914) 649-3317 (833) THE-COIN (833) 843-2646

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