Actually, unless you know how to grade your coins, no site will be of much help. A site may bring it to your attention that no matter what grade, it is a rare item, but the chances are not in your favor.. You need to take them to a coin dealer, so he can see them and grade them, then he can make an offer. Also be aware that different coins need to be seen by different coin dealers. U.S. coin dealers, at least 99% of them have no idea how much world coins, ancient or medieval coins are worth. These coins need to be seen by dealers who deal in them.
2006-10-14 12:57:11
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answer #1
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answered by Taiping 7
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Hello, There are many but to be honest you'll be wasting your time. Coins are different do not clean them or allow them to touch other surfaces. Take them into a dealer and ask for a written estimate. Trust me have I lied to you? :-)
God Bless you and the Southern People.
2006-10-14 08:35:08
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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interior the U. S. the well-known reference for worldwide funds is Krause's "well-known Catalog of worldwide funds". those are vast thick books that are extremely costly so I recommend you spot in the adventure that your close by library has a duplicate in its reference area. different than for the rather uncommon stuff fees for worldwide funds are exceptionally sturdy interior the U. S.. So even a e book one or 2 years previous can help you with the pricing. the single exception being if the coin has a extensive silver content. Then the recent value of silver might have an consequence on its value. sturdy luck.
2016-10-02 07:22:51
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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here are sites for finding coin values;
http://www.bestcoin.com
http://www.us-coin-values
http://coins.heritageauctions.com/info/typevalues.php
2006-10-14 09:05:24
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answer #4
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answered by Jack's Q&* 7
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try coins for sale.com
coin values.com
2006-10-14 08:33:30
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answer #5
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answered by wil_t52 6
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