What's your "go to" Coin Pricing Guide for retail purchases?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by jake1932, Dec 27, 2017.

  1. jake1932

    jake1932 Active Member

    In my experience I know quite a few dealers use the grey sheet as a price guide. But some of us cant justify the cost of some publications due to the small amount of coin purchases we actually make in a year for example. I was just wondering what publications or coin price guides have proven to be most helpful and/or reflect fair market coin values so as to be able to make informed decisions on prices paid for coins.
     
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  3. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    Most things eBay and auction records will be the best source for a general idea.
     
  4. CoinBreaux

    CoinBreaux Well-Known Member

    There will never be a single coin pricing guide that will give you accurate numbers. It is best to use several different sources. I’d recommend Heritage Auctions Records, PCGS Auction Records, eBay, and the NGC Price Guide.
     
    Last edited: Dec 27, 2017
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  5. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

    recent ebay sales
     
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  6. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

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  7. 352sdeer

    352sdeer Collecting Lincoln cents for 50 years!

    PCGS and NGC to get close. Not a lot of good pricing sources for low end Lincolns so mostly by feel on the low end. But I don’t sell so if I price them it’s just for fun! All part of the hobby I guess I should enjoy that part more. Thanks for the reminder.
    Reed.
     
  8. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    Coin World also has a free guide on line but their prices often are a bit low. All of the sources cited above are good.
     
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  9. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    I have CoinFacts set up on my phone.
     
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  10. micbraun

    micbraun coindiccted

    My rule of thumb for NGC coin explorer/PCGS Price Guide values:

    PG -20% for an average coin, PG value for better coins (great eye appeal, luster, some toning, etc.), PG +20% for superb coins or rainbow toners.

    E.g. a 1945-D MS 66+ 50C is at $250 (PCGS) or at $270 (NGC) respectively. I paid about $280 for an outstanding PCGS example with rainbow toning and a CAC sticker. I wouldn’t have paid $200 for a white coin w/o CAC sticker and I found some PCGS graded coins which sold for less than that in 2017.
     
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  11. Chiefbullsit

    Chiefbullsit CRAZY HORSE

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  12. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

    Pcgs CoinFacts for a more retail price and I use the auction records link on it. I have it on my phone and of course the greysheet
     
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  13. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator

    It depends on the coin(s). To save time I go straight to Grey Sheet For something common . . . for something scarce or rare I use auction records. Caution . . . using auction prices realized without opening up the auctions and actually looking at the coins is ill-advised.
     
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  14. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

    Can’t agree more. So many times a coin that sells cheap is ugly and one that goes high is original eye appealing and cac approved
     
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  15. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    US coins? I primarily use Numismedia, though I usually cross-reference that with the PCGS priceguide and the Red Book.

    For World Coins, I primarily use the NGC World Coin Price guide, which gets its data from the Krause Standard Catalog.

    For Ancient Coins, I really should be using ACSearch like most savvy collectors seem to do, but what I actually do more often is compare the retail prices of similar coins for sale on the VCoins online mall, and rely an awful lot on gut instinct and my opinion of a coin's eye appeal.

    For Exonumia, one really has to use past auctions for a reference. I've been a collector of love tokens in the past, and used a lot of gut instinct there when bidding. One could say I pulled my own numbers out of the air, and kept my own counsel in that category.

    I do "fly by the seat of my pants" quite a bit.
     
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  16. calcol

    calcol Supporter! Supporter

    For mid- to high end, PCGS auction prices realized. It will get most of the big guys, like eBay, Heritage and StacksBowers, and some of the smaller, like Scotsman. It's not comprehensive though. For example, they don't include Great Collections prices for some reason and don't cover sales of US coins in Europe. It sometimes has errors and omissions though. CAC designations are often missing. A nice feature is the quick sorting (price, grade, date of sale, etc.) and click-through links to auction company listings. The data will copy over nicely to a spreadsheet too (paste as text, not HTML).

    Cal
     
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  17. mac266

    mac266 Well-Known Member

    I use Numismedia.
     
  18. KSorbo

    KSorbo Well-Known Member

    EBay and Heritage. For commonly traded coins I lean more toward EBay because that represents the price range I would be most likely to sell the coin at. Of course the earlier posts about looking at the actual quality of the coin within its grade are spot on. I wouldn’t expect to get a premium coin for an ugly coin price.
     
  19. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    Exactly this. This is where people misuse price guides and auction results the most.
     
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