To Clean or Not to Clean

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by TheHeir, May 8, 2026 at 10:28 AM.

  1. TheHeir

    TheHeir New Member

    When I see 1800’s gold coins for sale (screen capture below), are these cleaned? I have many uncirculated 1800’s gold coins and they’re not this clean, in fact a lot of them have tarnished to a slightly darker gold patina/color through the years.

    Mine also have some blank around the edges of stars and dates. The image below is not like that. If you clean a gold coin to make the gold standout, do you lower its value like a copper coin?

    IMG_7144.jpeg
     
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  3. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    Not sure what you mean, cleaning any coin is a bad idea. There is a difference between cleaning and restoration. I would advise you to post some photos or send the coin to a professional.
     
    Randy Abercrombie likes this.
  4. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    Gold doesn't change or tarnish in the same way you see from silver. You will see gold recovered from archeological sites that looks as it did a thousand year ago. Now minted gold contains a small mix of alloys and those alloys will tarnish. But gold doesn't.
     
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  5. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Gold coins should not be sent cleaned. If that coin was cleaned there is a way that NGC can find out using special lighting equipment. Then they would give it a Details grade. Not a Mint State grade.
     
    Last edited: May 8, 2026 at 11:27 AM
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  6. JoshuaP

    JoshuaP Well-Known Member

    Cleaning coins is rarely ever a good idea. I have found it interesting, however, that the rise in precious metals values has wiped a lot of those premiums out. I sold a $5 Indian and 2 $2.5 Indians to a coin shop within the past several months. One of the $2.5 Indians had been cleaned, but I got the same price for it as the other due to melt being so high. Maybe one day it will again make a difference in price. The only difference I see currently is as a graded coin. It doesn't seem worth it to grade a coin that will only come back "details," but perhaps so if it is MS.
     
  7. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    It straight graded so not cleaned. A cleaned coin is a details coin. It would be noted on the slab label.
    Gold is entirely different from silver in the way it tarnishes and reacts to the environment. And it’s never a good idea to clean a coin.
     
  8. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    Just my opinion - but slightly darker gold patina looks nicer to me than the pale gold like in the picture. So I would just leave them alone.
     

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