Right off the bat, I want to say that I'm not actually going to be selling anything. This is just one of those "what if" questions.... If I wanted to sell a completed set of some kind of coin, let's say Jefferson Nickels, just because it's easy to get a complete set of them, is there some kind of premium for selling the set together that is over the total sale price of each individual coin in the set? I only ask because I am having some trouble finding out on my own. Ebay carries mostly "almost completed sets" of whatever coin, and none of my price guides have such a listing. Thanks for any help! ~AJ
ajm229, You can look up values of completed sets of coins on the PCGS Website at "www.pcgs.com" then scroll down and click on the "PCGS Price Guide" on the left menu, then choose the coins (i.e. Lincoln Cents from 1909-1958, etc.) that you are wanting a value for. They list a value for just about every U.S. coin ever minted and list the values of complete sets at the beginning of the values. However, I find some of these are hard to understand and they are almost always for sets of very high grade coins! Good luck...Frank
I disagree 100% and more...PCGS's price guide is not the best place to look up values...they up the value and then when you think you have a rare coin its not after all...;--) Speedy
The Grey sheet lists values for some complete sets - but not all of them. And they don't for nickels. But not long ago a member of my coin club asked the same question about a complete Jefferson set, all coins MS65/PF65, raw. Best answer I could come up with was about $450 - $500 for the set. And Speedy's right - forget the PCGS price guide. It's worse than worthless.