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

ANA Life Member, USPAP Compliant, IRS Standards, Family Friendly





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

ANA Life Member, USPAP Compliant, IRS Standards, Family Friendly




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. 1942 barbara dime ,1977 liberty word error , possible 2005 copper dime ,1975 DD dime Double struck 2015 penny 2014 discolored penny

In 1942 they made Mercury dimes not barber dimes. It's worth a couple dollars. The others are get what you can, I don't deal in modern errors and varieties because they are usually damage and not actual mint errors, and don't have much value.

D. sipver medallion token from 1928 detroit coin club.

Now that is cool, and a beautiful piece to boot. I can't tell whether it's metallic silver or just silver in color. But what a wonderful design. Usually medals aren't worth much, but if it's really silver I'd say it's worth between 50 and $75. Retail.

D. Rare Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) National Counterterrorism CenterChallamhe coin .good condition mint value $1900 poor $380

Are you asking me the value or telling me? Because if you are asking, you need to chop off a digit or two from your numbers. This is the second of these "rarities" I've seen in as many days. It's a challenge coin that military folks like to trade when they are out drinking and such, but not at all rare. Usually they just have a value of a few dollars on a good day. This one is very cool and quite popular, and I would put the value in the $20-30 range. A couple "luck" winners paid $150-300 for si...

D. 1965 quarter error no mint mark, ddo, ddr, possible rim error, writing going off edge obverse and reverse

We do not do much with modern varieties and errors, unless they are significant ones to the naked eye. They don't fetch much in actual sales, and it usually isn't worth having them certified. It's a modern craze that has picked up a huge amount in the last 12 months, and will surely die down about as fast. Stick with the older stuff!

D. Bicentennial Kennedy half dollar ddo, ddr....not sure of other errors, please help me if you can in identifying others???

We do not do much with modern varieties and errors, unless they are significant ones to the naked eye. They don't fetch much in actual sales, and it usually isn't worth having them certified. It's a modern craze that has picked up a huge amount in the last 12 months, and will surely die down about as fast. Stick with the older stuff!

D. 2020 mint condition p on back is ph and r2m

Looks like a good quarter for Halloween!

D. 1791 silver dollar

Holy cow! A 1793 Trade Dollar! It would be priceless... except that the first Trade Dollar was struck in 1873, 8 decades later. This is a design that would not have existed in the 18th Century. Other ways we can tell it's not real: it has very soft features, as it was cast from a mold and not struck like coins. Also, the color is too even, a muddled gray; a real coin this old would have dirt in the devices, stains, uneven toning... and be much more beautiful. There is no value; if you sell it, n...

D. 1940 Liberty walking silver half dollar

A lovely specimen in extra fine, I'd charge $20 or 30 for it, do you have others?

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.

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(914) 649-3317 (833) THE-COIN (833) 843-2646

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