Whats a reasonable price to pay for these.

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Jswain0411, Jul 25, 2009.

  1. Jswain0411

    Jswain0411 Member

    Low grade versions of

    1. Any half cent
    2. Twenty Cent
    3. Trade Dollar
    4. Capped Quarter
    5. Seated Half
     
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  3. k9brain

    k9brain Junior Member

    The Red Book will help with the prices.

    You are better off getting one coin in F to XF than 5 coins in AG - G condition. Just my opinion.
     
  4. Jswain0411

    Jswain0411 Member

    So i'm a little confused or the books. Am I right with this?

    Blue Book=what the dealers will pay you
    Red Book=what you will pay the dealers

     
  5. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    I am not sure about blue book, but the red book prices have never lined up with coins I was looking at. Probably the Gray Sheet is more in tuned to dealers bid and ask prices. The problems with throwing out prices for the coins you mention - will vary greatly with the condition of the coin. I know you said low grade - but how low? Problem free - minor problems like an old cleaning? Those things make a difference.
     
  6. RedTiger

    RedTiger Member

    Ignore the blue book. The red book isn't so great on prices either.

    Numismedia gives what they see as typical retail prices. The PCGS guide gives high retail prices.
    http://www.numismedia.com/fmv/fmv.shtml
    http://www.pcgs.com/prices/

    Auction prices realized are often the best indication (Heritage, Teletrade, Ebay). For low grade early type, I suggest going to a local coin show if possible. If not, get some dealer references to shop online. I would not buy raw online from unknown sellers on Ebay unless I had a good grasp of grading and at least the basics of counterfeit detection.

    Price and quality are variables. Sometimes a low price is not a bargain, sometimes it is, depends on the coin. Some dealers charge a high price for the grade and deliver quality for the grade. Some don't. Full page magazine ads offering low prices, often deliver low quality or sometimes even problem coins.
     
  7. majorbigtime

    majorbigtime New Member

    CHeck the dealer buy prices in the classified section of Coin World, If you can buy close to those prices, you are buying "right".
     
  8. Irespire

    Irespire Senior Member

    Half Cent....I think around $50 is average, give or take $10 for more common types/dates
    Twenty Cent, around $100
    Trade Dollar....a low grade slabbed one, maybe $150
    Capped Quarters are expensive in large size, so maybe $120 for large size, $70 for small size
    Seated Half..$23-28
     
  9. Mark Feld

    Mark Feld Rare coin dealer

    You're going to get in trouble if you are too general in your questions about prices and rely on the answers. Ditto for relying too heavily on price guides. Sometimes a small difference in grade/quality can make a big difference in price. And the date can make a difference, too. Additionally, there is more than one type of Half Cent, Capped Quarter and Seated Half.

    Please don't spend any money on coins until you study up and know what you're doing.
     
  10. coinman0456

    coinman0456 Coin Collector

    $30-$125**no drapery

    *other seated G-XF $25-$90.00

    *W/arrows & rays in XF 200.00+
    *arrows 1873-74 in XF 200.00 +



    Hope that helps some.
     
  11. coinman0456

    coinman0456 Coin Collector

    Good - VG Good- Fine Good-VF
    1. Any half cent $50-$70.00
    2. Twenty Cent $80-$130
    3. Trade Dollar $60-$130.00
    4. Capped Quarter $60-$130
    5. Seated Half[/QUOTE] $30-$125**no drapery

    *other seated G-XF $25-$90.00

    *W/arrows & rays in XF 200.00+
     
  12. Irespire

    Irespire Senior Member

    The only no drapery seated half is 1839, right? In that case, I've actually seen prices upwards of 60 for messed up G-4/G-6 coins, and well into the hundreds or even 1000+ for mid grade circulated coins.
     
  13. FarmerB

    FarmerB Senior Member

    I think you may want to specialize a little to get your feet wet.
    I have seen trade dollars go for $20 -- oops Chinese counterfeits!!
    Ya gotta be careful - a good deal may be DANGER DANGER.
    Knowledge is your best defense here.
    Go to local library - get some books out and see if you can specialize a little. Then branch out as you make connections to dealers you like and trust.
    You can always post pictures and ask questions here. There are many of us who are more than willing to give an opinion. :eek::eek:
    Good luck and post those pictures of your latest finds
     
  14. coinman0456

    coinman0456 Coin Collector

    since that attempt of mine at the post , is not understandable. here goes again.

    Half cent in Good-VG anywhere from $50-70.00
    1849-57 XF-AU 70-100+
    Twenty Cent: Good -Fine $80-130.00

    Quarter: good-Fine 60-130.00

    Trade : Good-VF 60.00-130.00

    Yeah be very careful buying those trade dollars, ask for opinions here before buying.
     
  15. Jswain0411

    Jswain0411 Member

    Thanks everyone for you posts. I understand prices depend on a lot of things but the ideas you gave me will help me understand more. Appreciate the help. I think i'm going to go to a coin show in September and check out everything there and get some estimates.
     
  16. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Excellent advice from Mark...:smile
     
  17. mcarney1173

    mcarney1173 Senior Member

    Agreeing with what many have also said in this thread, I agree that some of Redbook's prices being off. :desk:
     
  18. RedTiger

    RedTiger Member

    A person can learn a little from reading books, and looking at website photos. Most will learn much more hands on, with real coins that he/she bought. I am from the school of: start slow, buy small, but go ahead and buy, and start enjoying the hobby. If a person wanted to study, they could do 100 other more financially or socially rewarding things instead of spending time studying for what is supposed to be a fun hobby.

    How I phrase it is: "don't buy expensive coins, until you learn the basics of grading and pricing." It is an exceptional person that learns these things without buying any coins, maybe like 1%. Expensive is going to have a different definition for each person. So buy small, start slow, don't jump into the deep end without knowing the basics, understand that learning is a process, expedited by doing.
     
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