We buy rare coins, bullion, and full collections from Dallas-area sellers. Call us for a no-obligation quote based on current market conditions, the type of coin, and its condition.
Whether you’ve inherited a collection, accumulated coins over the years, or have a single piece you’re curious about, the process is the same. Call us, describe what you have, and we’ll walk through how value is determined.
We buy individual coins, partial collections, and complete estates. There’s no minimum and no maximum. The conversation can be quick or detailed.
A coin’s value is rarely just about the metal. The combination of date, mint mark, condition, and rarity often matters more than weight.
Some years, mints, and series carry significant collector demand. A common-date Morgan dollar and a key-date Morgan can differ by orders of magnitude in value.
Coins are valued on a 70-point scale. The difference between MS-63 and MS-65 on the same coin can mean a substantial price gap. Slabbed coins help.
Spot prices for gold and silver move daily. For bullion coins, the day's spot price is the largest factor. For numismatic coins, market demand cycles also apply.
Have your coins (or photos) on hand if you can. If not, a description works to start the conversation.
Type, date, mint mark, condition. We’ll ask about any grading paperwork, holders, or original packaging.
Final offers depend on physical evaluation, but we can discuss approximate ranges based on what you describe.
Move forward, think it over, or end the call. Same-day service available when you’re ready.
None of these are required. We’re happy to help you figure out what you have on the call. But if any of this is easy to gather, it speeds things along.
No. Many coins we buy aren't slabbed. Grading helps establish exact condition and adds confidence to a quote, but it isn’t a requirement. For high-value coins, grading sometimes makes economic sense before selling. We can discuss whether that applies to a specific coin during the call.
Either. There’s no minimum. A single Saint-Gaudens or a box of inherited Morgans, the process is the same.
That’s a common starting point, especially with inherited coins. We can walk through identification on the call. If you can read a year and a denomination off the coin, that’s usually enough to begin.
Bullion coins are priced primarily based on their metal content and current spot prices. There’s typically a small premium over melt depending on the coin and current market demand.
Heavy wear or damage can reduce numismatic value, sometimes down to melt value for the metal content. Worn bullion coins still carry their metal value. We can discuss what condition affects pricing during the call.