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<p>[QUOTE="huntsman53, post: 358220, member: 1242"]If you check closed auctions on eBay, you will notice that many of the auctions for Bullion Silver Coins, sell above the going rate of what most Coin Dealers and Bullion Silver Buyers are paying for them (i.e. current factor times face value of the Silver). It is best to sell these by denominations, Series and Types if possible (i.e. Mercury Dimes, Silver Washington, Barber Halfs) as they seem to bring higher prices this way. However, if you don't have a lot of each, you could sell Barber, Walking Liberty, Franklin and 90% Silver Kennedy Halfs in one lot and they should still bring a premium over what most Coin Dealers are paying.</p><p><br /></p><p>The key to keeping your eBay fees as low as possible, is to keep the listing simple (one or two pictures, no Reserve if you are certain that they will sell for what you need out of them and no extra frills) but provide enough information in the Auction Listing to sufficiently inform any potential bidders of what you are selling. There is nothing you can do to lower the final bid price fee that eBay charges but I think that they still refund the Reserve Price fee if the item(s) sell. I would advise that you check out any and all closed eBay auctions where the Silver coins sold well above what any Coin Dealers and even some Silver Bullion Buyers would pay for them and see what worked for these Sellers.</p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p>Frank[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="huntsman53, post: 358220, member: 1242"]If you check closed auctions on eBay, you will notice that many of the auctions for Bullion Silver Coins, sell above the going rate of what most Coin Dealers and Bullion Silver Buyers are paying for them (i.e. current factor times face value of the Silver). It is best to sell these by denominations, Series and Types if possible (i.e. Mercury Dimes, Silver Washington, Barber Halfs) as they seem to bring higher prices this way. However, if you don't have a lot of each, you could sell Barber, Walking Liberty, Franklin and 90% Silver Kennedy Halfs in one lot and they should still bring a premium over what most Coin Dealers are paying. The key to keeping your eBay fees as low as possible, is to keep the listing simple (one or two pictures, no Reserve if you are certain that they will sell for what you need out of them and no extra frills) but provide enough information in the Auction Listing to sufficiently inform any potential bidders of what you are selling. There is nothing you can do to lower the final bid price fee that eBay charges but I think that they still refund the Reserve Price fee if the item(s) sell. I would advise that you check out any and all closed eBay auctions where the Silver coins sold well above what any Coin Dealers and even some Silver Bullion Buyers would pay for them and see what worked for these Sellers. Frank[/QUOTE]
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Worth anything above bullion value?
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