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!

Search

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.

Photo Criteria: Acceptable photo formats are gif, jpg, and png and no larger than 15 MB. If you are using an iPhone, make sure that the photo is not set to LIVE, as this format will be not be uploaded. 


Add images of your item or collection.

Recent Appraisals

APPRAISALS

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

D. Wondering if this is just damaged or an error. Thank You

Well, let's look at it and think about the minting process. Errors are things like an off center strike, wrong planchet, double die. A valuable error coin probably has no circulation wear, and is otherwise shiny and as minted. This dime is mangled. It looks like it was on the road or in a blender. I can't think of what could have happened by mistake at the mint that would lead to this. Short of depositing it at the bank, I can't see it being worth anything. Sorry, but that's my opinion! ...

D. Hello! I inherited 2 Morgans (1882, 1890) , 5 liberty dollars (1922, 1923, 1925), several 1964 Kennedy dollars and a couple 1967. All are well circulated, sadly. I'm fairly sure they are only worth silver melt value but hoped for confirmation. Thank you!

Actually you might find it hard to get the theoretical melt value. Published prices are high. Unless the morgans have CC mint marks under the eagle, everything can be priced accurately at coinflation.com; drop 10-20% from the total you get for a realistic value if you wish to sell. We want it... but need to make a modest profit.

D. 1798 Liberty Draped Bust Large Cent

Condition is rough but looks real. This coin should trade between $50 and $75.

D. Ok

Was that a question? You either have a quarter with an obstruction error, or, more likely, one with post mint damage. $25 for the former, $0.25 the latter. Have to see in person.

D. I found this coin. The front looks funny with text backwards like it was printed on twice. Is it worth anything? I couldn't find anything like it on the internet.

Very hard to see in photos. It’s possibly a brockage error, which you can research. Not dramatic enough to retire on, but possibly worth $25. Would love to see it!

D. Gold coins

The double eagle ($20) is worth around $3,300. If the other is $5, $850; if it’s $10, $1,700.

D. 1956 D Wheat Penny. The "L" in Liberty is slightly off center, closer to the edge of the penny.

Common wheat cents are worth a few cents apiece. Minor variations in minting or wear do not have a great bearing on value.

D. 1976 2 dollar bill is off center on the front and back of the bill.

There’s nothing that strikes me about this that would make it more than two dollars.

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

}