Do any of you guys or gals exchange your Canadian money?

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by mrbreeze, Jun 25, 2017.

  1. mrbreeze

    mrbreeze Well-Known Member

    I am sure, like me, a lot of you guys/gals have Canadian money in your collection. After several years of accumulating, I am wondering if there is a way to exchange what I have and if any of you have used an avenue for exchange. I have everything from cents to currency. I assume the paper is not that hard to exchange, but what about the small change. I looked at prices for shipping to Canada, that being dependent on if I found a place to ship it, and that was prohibitively expensive.
     
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  3. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    I can exchange paper in the bank, I sell the coin for about 75% of exchange value.
     
  4. Maxfli

    Maxfli Well-Known Member

    Do you live near an airport that has international flights? If so, there's most likely a currency exchange office in the terminal. That would be an easy way to do it.
     
  5. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Well, having family near the Canadian border helps. I plan to just spend all the excess next time I visit and drive a little north. You could list it in Canada's eBay. You'd likely get close to actual value minus shipping and fees.
     
  6. Bill in Burl

    Bill in Burl Collector

    A US dollar is now worth about $1.33 Canadian, so $300 US would be $400 Canadian and, inverting that, a Canada dollar is worth about 75 cents US . Federal Reserve Banks in the US will exchange the paper money, but not the coinage. The coins you would have to get to Canada to cash or spend. The coin machines up here take a 15-18% cut to convert to paper money. It is WAY too expensive to ship to Canada and Canada EBay would cost an arm and a leg ... postage PLUS their huge cut.
     
  7. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Is it truly that expensive to ship to Canada? Also, if you have $400 Canadian, I'd rather have $250 US than a bunch of coins I can't use... I guess one must decide where to draw the line.
     
  8. Zonker

    Zonker Active Member

    I usually exchange my change for beer. International Airports would be my second choice.
     
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  9. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    The closer you are to the border the more likely it's just part of the standard money supply. I can get and give canadian coin money as payment. Canadian Paper money though needs to go through a conversion at airports, bridges, etc.
     
  10. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    I never liked these cheap sleazy bums in Maine bars and restaurants, who would give you Canadian change when you paid your tab in US dollars, (in order to save a few cents) and then not accept them as currency. I guess they just assumed since the money was virtually worthless, it would just keep getting recycled as "tips". Tips you can't spend anywhere. There needs to be Coin Star on the border states that accept Canadian coins, and return US Dollars. (Minus their usurious fee.)
     
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  11. Zonker

    Zonker Active Member

    Tips - now there's a thought. Mediocre service???
     
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  12. thedredge

    thedredge Active Member

    Here in Canada I have never had a problem with exchanging currency. As long as the coin is rolled in rolls the Royal Bank has exchanged it without issue. Not worth going through rolls looking for them but I do put them on the side.
     
  13. harley bissell

    harley bissell Well-Known Member

    Members of my coin club pool their coins and notes and send them north with a person who frequently visits Canada. I've seen a currency exchange at the Indianapolis airport. They were closed and I didn't check to see if they exchange coins. When he gets there he rolls and converts them to paper money then visits Canada coin dealers to purchase older u s coins that we use for door prizes at the coin club meetings. Eventually he will find a dealer with a coin counter who doesn't mind cashing them as sales credit. I give the scratched and damaged coins. The others I use to make Canada sets and starter sets that I sell at my coin club auctions. I use Canada folders for the complete sets. For the partial stripped or starter sets I use blank Whitman folders. Since the Whitman Canada folders were last printed in the early 1960s I don't waste them on partial sets.
     
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  14. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Ahem...not sure if this is within the rules, but any of our northern friends here on CT could exchange a message with the OP and let the OP ship the coins to them for exchange rate or close to...
     
  15. Cheech9712

    Cheech9712 Every thing is a guess

    In buffalo. I could help. They have exchange stations at the bridge
     
  16. Friday

    Friday Active Member

    Hi,Mr.Breeze, I have some Canadian coin of different forms nothing about them,I have a silver and red like stick to a magnet do that worth anything money yes or no also have a 1927 nickel and old penny.
     
  17. Cheech9712

    Cheech9712 Every thing is a guess

    Did you try filling out canadian coin books
     
  18. mlov43

    mlov43 주화 수집가

    Like Seattlite, I just go over the border and spend it on a donut at Tim Horton's.
     
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  19. jester3681

    jester3681 Exonumia Enthusiast

    Back in the pre-9/11 days off jumping the border with a state ID, I was in Canada frequently. I'd play the exchange game - the rates were usually different at the border than they were further in, and there was money to be made. I haven't been to Maple Land since though.
     
  20. Gallienus

    Gallienus coinsandhistory.com Supporter

    Many years ago in a tourist town in southern New Jersy, when I was a kid, I had the bright idea of buying $300 of Canadian coins from a bank. You see a lot of these Canadians had no idea that their coins had silver and would spend them. I was very happy to find 10% of the whole bag was silver.

    Then the problem was "how to get rid of the rest of them". I tried everything. Eventually my parents came to the rescue and were able to spend all $270 of them for face value in the US.
     
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