How do I get money back for my foreign coins?



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up vote
31
down vote

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Tonight I just cleaned my room and while doing this I found some money. I counted it and I found out that there are a lot of coins from 25 different countries.



I know that normally banks don't exchange foreign currencies in coins, but is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins?










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  • 5




    Do you have a noticeable amount in any of the currencies? I'd say that as a rule of thumb, if you have under a beer/coffee worth of coins, it's not going to be worth trying to get it changed...
    – Gagravarr
    Aug 26 '11 at 21:20






  • 8




    I just give them away as gifts to friends kids and such.
    – Beaker
    Aug 27 '11 at 0:16






  • 3




    "Foreign coins... that's not money! I want my money back!"
    – user82
    Jul 1 '12 at 15:17







  • 2




    The question at hand is "is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins"
    – Fattie
    Oct 30 '14 at 10:04






  • 1




    Perhaps sell them on eBay, some people collect these...
    – Willem Van Onsem
    May 15 '15 at 9:56
















up vote
31
down vote

favorite
6












Tonight I just cleaned my room and while doing this I found some money. I counted it and I found out that there are a lot of coins from 25 different countries.



I know that normally banks don't exchange foreign currencies in coins, but is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins?










share|improve this question



















  • 5




    Do you have a noticeable amount in any of the currencies? I'd say that as a rule of thumb, if you have under a beer/coffee worth of coins, it's not going to be worth trying to get it changed...
    – Gagravarr
    Aug 26 '11 at 21:20






  • 8




    I just give them away as gifts to friends kids and such.
    – Beaker
    Aug 27 '11 at 0:16






  • 3




    "Foreign coins... that's not money! I want my money back!"
    – user82
    Jul 1 '12 at 15:17







  • 2




    The question at hand is "is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins"
    – Fattie
    Oct 30 '14 at 10:04






  • 1




    Perhaps sell them on eBay, some people collect these...
    – Willem Van Onsem
    May 15 '15 at 9:56












up vote
31
down vote

favorite
6









up vote
31
down vote

favorite
6






6





Tonight I just cleaned my room and while doing this I found some money. I counted it and I found out that there are a lot of coins from 25 different countries.



I know that normally banks don't exchange foreign currencies in coins, but is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins?










share|improve this question















Tonight I just cleaned my room and while doing this I found some money. I counted it and I found out that there are a lot of coins from 25 different countries.



I know that normally banks don't exchange foreign currencies in coins, but is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins?







money tips-and-tricks exchange






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 30 '15 at 20:57









JoErNanO♦

43.4k12134217




43.4k12134217










asked Aug 26 '11 at 20:59









RoflcoptrException

34.1k41166369




34.1k41166369







  • 5




    Do you have a noticeable amount in any of the currencies? I'd say that as a rule of thumb, if you have under a beer/coffee worth of coins, it's not going to be worth trying to get it changed...
    – Gagravarr
    Aug 26 '11 at 21:20






  • 8




    I just give them away as gifts to friends kids and such.
    – Beaker
    Aug 27 '11 at 0:16






  • 3




    "Foreign coins... that's not money! I want my money back!"
    – user82
    Jul 1 '12 at 15:17







  • 2




    The question at hand is "is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins"
    – Fattie
    Oct 30 '14 at 10:04






  • 1




    Perhaps sell them on eBay, some people collect these...
    – Willem Van Onsem
    May 15 '15 at 9:56












  • 5




    Do you have a noticeable amount in any of the currencies? I'd say that as a rule of thumb, if you have under a beer/coffee worth of coins, it's not going to be worth trying to get it changed...
    – Gagravarr
    Aug 26 '11 at 21:20






  • 8




    I just give them away as gifts to friends kids and such.
    – Beaker
    Aug 27 '11 at 0:16






  • 3




    "Foreign coins... that's not money! I want my money back!"
    – user82
    Jul 1 '12 at 15:17







  • 2




    The question at hand is "is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins"
    – Fattie
    Oct 30 '14 at 10:04






  • 1




    Perhaps sell them on eBay, some people collect these...
    – Willem Van Onsem
    May 15 '15 at 9:56







5




5




Do you have a noticeable amount in any of the currencies? I'd say that as a rule of thumb, if you have under a beer/coffee worth of coins, it's not going to be worth trying to get it changed...
– Gagravarr
Aug 26 '11 at 21:20




Do you have a noticeable amount in any of the currencies? I'd say that as a rule of thumb, if you have under a beer/coffee worth of coins, it's not going to be worth trying to get it changed...
– Gagravarr
Aug 26 '11 at 21:20




8




8




I just give them away as gifts to friends kids and such.
– Beaker
Aug 27 '11 at 0:16




I just give them away as gifts to friends kids and such.
– Beaker
Aug 27 '11 at 0:16




3




3




"Foreign coins... that's not money! I want my money back!"
– user82
Jul 1 '12 at 15:17





"Foreign coins... that's not money! I want my money back!"
– user82
Jul 1 '12 at 15:17





2




2




The question at hand is "is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins"
– Fattie
Oct 30 '14 at 10:04




The question at hand is "is there a way so that I can still get some money for my foreign coins"
– Fattie
Oct 30 '14 at 10:04




1




1




Perhaps sell them on eBay, some people collect these...
– Willem Van Onsem
May 15 '15 at 9:56




Perhaps sell them on eBay, some people collect these...
– Willem Van Onsem
May 15 '15 at 9:56










7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
27
down vote



accepted










Unless it is a significant amount, changing coins isn't worth it. The amounts are small and most banks and foreign exchanges won't accept coins generally.



unicef change for good logo



My solution is to collect the left over foreign coins until I fly on an airline that participates in the Change for Good program and then donate them. British Airways and Virgin also have their own programs. It is a great concept as a small amount of foreign coins isn't very valuable to you, but when compounded across thousands of passengers a year, it can make a real difference.



If you don't want to wait until your next flight to donate, many charity shops (at least in the UK) accept foreign coins.






share|improve this answer
















  • 3




    If you won't be flying on a participating airline anytime soon, you can also send your coins direct to UNICEF Change for Good at the address on their website.
    – tcrosley
    Jun 10 '12 at 18:18











  • Or put them in a Unicef box at one of the participating airports.
    – tricasse
    Sep 29 '12 at 22:18

















up vote
17
down vote













Every international airport I've visited has something like this:



donation centre for coins



(This one was in Schiphol yesterday, but I've seen them everywhere.)



It doesn't matter what country the coins are from or what country you're in. They'll sort them out and spend them to make the world better. Just gather up what you have and drop them off next time you see one.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    14
    down vote













    If you really want to change them, your best bets is to change the currency with people who go to the currency's country, either tourists or residents.



    Usually, I just keep the coins around and give them to friends when they go to somewhere I happen to have some coins from.



    Other than that? Just keep them as souvenirs, give them away, go visit the same country again?



    Also, I noticed that coins sometimes can be exchanged at airports/borders, as long as it is part of a reasonable sum of money.






    share|improve this answer
















    • 3




      Coins are sometimes taken by currency exchanges if it helps round off a transaction to whole numbers. This mostly is true of currencies where coin denominations have a significant value in the currency being changed to, and whether a lot of transaction happens between those two currencies.
      – Ankur Banerjee♦
      Aug 27 '11 at 11:28

















    up vote
    9
    down vote













    If you happen to visit a school show, where students show their hobbies, you will find that world coins are quite popular as a collection topic. You could perhaps give it a some collector.



    Donate it to church auction. Some coins which form a set of a country, may be interesting prize.



    Last choice is sell it on eBay.






    share|improve this answer





























      up vote
      8
      down vote













      You can also try selling them on eBay and get most of your money back that way too. Some of the coins may be worth $1 or more on face value for just one, such as the Japanese Y500 yen or the British £1. So a "handful" can be worth over $20 easily. Donate it on the principle of giving can be another option.






      share|improve this answer



























        up vote
        7
        down vote













        There are a number of companies in the UK who exchange foreign coins. We had a whole load of foreign coins that we collected with our school and then sent them an organisation called Cash4Coins - they exchanged all the coins and once we'd agreed we were happy with the amount the money was in the bank in less than an hour. My son, who is at university is collecting foreign coins with his student union for charity... Cash4Coins also will collect for free if the coins weigh over 5kg.






        share|improve this answer






















        • It's worth noting, as @mindcorrosive pointed out to me, the site itself doesn't have the best online trust rating, so consider that before using it.
          – Mark Mayo♦
          Aug 23 '12 at 17:38

















        up vote
        6
        down vote













        If you have coins from 25 different countries, try selling them in bulk on ebay to collectors. This way you can even get what they are worth back (but usually a little less than their face value).






        share|improve this answer



















          protected by Community♦ Oct 4 '15 at 4:44



          Thank you for your interest in this question.
          Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



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          7 Answers
          7






          active

          oldest

          votes








          7 Answers
          7






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          27
          down vote



          accepted










          Unless it is a significant amount, changing coins isn't worth it. The amounts are small and most banks and foreign exchanges won't accept coins generally.



          unicef change for good logo



          My solution is to collect the left over foreign coins until I fly on an airline that participates in the Change for Good program and then donate them. British Airways and Virgin also have their own programs. It is a great concept as a small amount of foreign coins isn't very valuable to you, but when compounded across thousands of passengers a year, it can make a real difference.



          If you don't want to wait until your next flight to donate, many charity shops (at least in the UK) accept foreign coins.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 3




            If you won't be flying on a participating airline anytime soon, you can also send your coins direct to UNICEF Change for Good at the address on their website.
            – tcrosley
            Jun 10 '12 at 18:18











          • Or put them in a Unicef box at one of the participating airports.
            – tricasse
            Sep 29 '12 at 22:18














          up vote
          27
          down vote



          accepted










          Unless it is a significant amount, changing coins isn't worth it. The amounts are small and most banks and foreign exchanges won't accept coins generally.



          unicef change for good logo



          My solution is to collect the left over foreign coins until I fly on an airline that participates in the Change for Good program and then donate them. British Airways and Virgin also have their own programs. It is a great concept as a small amount of foreign coins isn't very valuable to you, but when compounded across thousands of passengers a year, it can make a real difference.



          If you don't want to wait until your next flight to donate, many charity shops (at least in the UK) accept foreign coins.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 3




            If you won't be flying on a participating airline anytime soon, you can also send your coins direct to UNICEF Change for Good at the address on their website.
            – tcrosley
            Jun 10 '12 at 18:18











          • Or put them in a Unicef box at one of the participating airports.
            – tricasse
            Sep 29 '12 at 22:18












          up vote
          27
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          27
          down vote



          accepted






          Unless it is a significant amount, changing coins isn't worth it. The amounts are small and most banks and foreign exchanges won't accept coins generally.



          unicef change for good logo



          My solution is to collect the left over foreign coins until I fly on an airline that participates in the Change for Good program and then donate them. British Airways and Virgin also have their own programs. It is a great concept as a small amount of foreign coins isn't very valuable to you, but when compounded across thousands of passengers a year, it can make a real difference.



          If you don't want to wait until your next flight to donate, many charity shops (at least in the UK) accept foreign coins.






          share|improve this answer












          Unless it is a significant amount, changing coins isn't worth it. The amounts are small and most banks and foreign exchanges won't accept coins generally.



          unicef change for good logo



          My solution is to collect the left over foreign coins until I fly on an airline that participates in the Change for Good program and then donate them. British Airways and Virgin also have their own programs. It is a great concept as a small amount of foreign coins isn't very valuable to you, but when compounded across thousands of passengers a year, it can make a real difference.



          If you don't want to wait until your next flight to donate, many charity shops (at least in the UK) accept foreign coins.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Aug 28 '11 at 20:54









          g .

          2,72411730




          2,72411730







          • 3




            If you won't be flying on a participating airline anytime soon, you can also send your coins direct to UNICEF Change for Good at the address on their website.
            – tcrosley
            Jun 10 '12 at 18:18











          • Or put them in a Unicef box at one of the participating airports.
            – tricasse
            Sep 29 '12 at 22:18












          • 3




            If you won't be flying on a participating airline anytime soon, you can also send your coins direct to UNICEF Change for Good at the address on their website.
            – tcrosley
            Jun 10 '12 at 18:18











          • Or put them in a Unicef box at one of the participating airports.
            – tricasse
            Sep 29 '12 at 22:18







          3




          3




          If you won't be flying on a participating airline anytime soon, you can also send your coins direct to UNICEF Change for Good at the address on their website.
          – tcrosley
          Jun 10 '12 at 18:18





          If you won't be flying on a participating airline anytime soon, you can also send your coins direct to UNICEF Change for Good at the address on their website.
          – tcrosley
          Jun 10 '12 at 18:18













          Or put them in a Unicef box at one of the participating airports.
          – tricasse
          Sep 29 '12 at 22:18




          Or put them in a Unicef box at one of the participating airports.
          – tricasse
          Sep 29 '12 at 22:18












          up vote
          17
          down vote













          Every international airport I've visited has something like this:



          donation centre for coins



          (This one was in Schiphol yesterday, but I've seen them everywhere.)



          It doesn't matter what country the coins are from or what country you're in. They'll sort them out and spend them to make the world better. Just gather up what you have and drop them off next time you see one.






          share|improve this answer
























            up vote
            17
            down vote













            Every international airport I've visited has something like this:



            donation centre for coins



            (This one was in Schiphol yesterday, but I've seen them everywhere.)



            It doesn't matter what country the coins are from or what country you're in. They'll sort them out and spend them to make the world better. Just gather up what you have and drop them off next time you see one.






            share|improve this answer






















              up vote
              17
              down vote










              up vote
              17
              down vote









              Every international airport I've visited has something like this:



              donation centre for coins



              (This one was in Schiphol yesterday, but I've seen them everywhere.)



              It doesn't matter what country the coins are from or what country you're in. They'll sort them out and spend them to make the world better. Just gather up what you have and drop them off next time you see one.






              share|improve this answer












              Every international airport I've visited has something like this:



              donation centre for coins



              (This one was in Schiphol yesterday, but I've seen them everywhere.)



              It doesn't matter what country the coins are from or what country you're in. They'll sort them out and spend them to make the world better. Just gather up what you have and drop them off next time you see one.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Jul 1 '12 at 12:16









              Kate Gregory

              57.3k9151248




              57.3k9151248




















                  up vote
                  14
                  down vote













                  If you really want to change them, your best bets is to change the currency with people who go to the currency's country, either tourists or residents.



                  Usually, I just keep the coins around and give them to friends when they go to somewhere I happen to have some coins from.



                  Other than that? Just keep them as souvenirs, give them away, go visit the same country again?



                  Also, I noticed that coins sometimes can be exchanged at airports/borders, as long as it is part of a reasonable sum of money.






                  share|improve this answer
















                  • 3




                    Coins are sometimes taken by currency exchanges if it helps round off a transaction to whole numbers. This mostly is true of currencies where coin denominations have a significant value in the currency being changed to, and whether a lot of transaction happens between those two currencies.
                    – Ankur Banerjee♦
                    Aug 27 '11 at 11:28














                  up vote
                  14
                  down vote













                  If you really want to change them, your best bets is to change the currency with people who go to the currency's country, either tourists or residents.



                  Usually, I just keep the coins around and give them to friends when they go to somewhere I happen to have some coins from.



                  Other than that? Just keep them as souvenirs, give them away, go visit the same country again?



                  Also, I noticed that coins sometimes can be exchanged at airports/borders, as long as it is part of a reasonable sum of money.






                  share|improve this answer
















                  • 3




                    Coins are sometimes taken by currency exchanges if it helps round off a transaction to whole numbers. This mostly is true of currencies where coin denominations have a significant value in the currency being changed to, and whether a lot of transaction happens between those two currencies.
                    – Ankur Banerjee♦
                    Aug 27 '11 at 11:28












                  up vote
                  14
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  14
                  down vote









                  If you really want to change them, your best bets is to change the currency with people who go to the currency's country, either tourists or residents.



                  Usually, I just keep the coins around and give them to friends when they go to somewhere I happen to have some coins from.



                  Other than that? Just keep them as souvenirs, give them away, go visit the same country again?



                  Also, I noticed that coins sometimes can be exchanged at airports/borders, as long as it is part of a reasonable sum of money.






                  share|improve this answer












                  If you really want to change them, your best bets is to change the currency with people who go to the currency's country, either tourists or residents.



                  Usually, I just keep the coins around and give them to friends when they go to somewhere I happen to have some coins from.



                  Other than that? Just keep them as souvenirs, give them away, go visit the same country again?



                  Also, I noticed that coins sometimes can be exchanged at airports/borders, as long as it is part of a reasonable sum of money.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Aug 27 '11 at 9:04









                  Jacco

                  2,14211733




                  2,14211733







                  • 3




                    Coins are sometimes taken by currency exchanges if it helps round off a transaction to whole numbers. This mostly is true of currencies where coin denominations have a significant value in the currency being changed to, and whether a lot of transaction happens between those two currencies.
                    – Ankur Banerjee♦
                    Aug 27 '11 at 11:28












                  • 3




                    Coins are sometimes taken by currency exchanges if it helps round off a transaction to whole numbers. This mostly is true of currencies where coin denominations have a significant value in the currency being changed to, and whether a lot of transaction happens between those two currencies.
                    – Ankur Banerjee♦
                    Aug 27 '11 at 11:28







                  3




                  3




                  Coins are sometimes taken by currency exchanges if it helps round off a transaction to whole numbers. This mostly is true of currencies where coin denominations have a significant value in the currency being changed to, and whether a lot of transaction happens between those two currencies.
                  – Ankur Banerjee♦
                  Aug 27 '11 at 11:28




                  Coins are sometimes taken by currency exchanges if it helps round off a transaction to whole numbers. This mostly is true of currencies where coin denominations have a significant value in the currency being changed to, and whether a lot of transaction happens between those two currencies.
                  – Ankur Banerjee♦
                  Aug 27 '11 at 11:28










                  up vote
                  9
                  down vote













                  If you happen to visit a school show, where students show their hobbies, you will find that world coins are quite popular as a collection topic. You could perhaps give it a some collector.



                  Donate it to church auction. Some coins which form a set of a country, may be interesting prize.



                  Last choice is sell it on eBay.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    up vote
                    9
                    down vote













                    If you happen to visit a school show, where students show their hobbies, you will find that world coins are quite popular as a collection topic. You could perhaps give it a some collector.



                    Donate it to church auction. Some coins which form a set of a country, may be interesting prize.



                    Last choice is sell it on eBay.






                    share|improve this answer
























                      up vote
                      9
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      9
                      down vote









                      If you happen to visit a school show, where students show their hobbies, you will find that world coins are quite popular as a collection topic. You could perhaps give it a some collector.



                      Donate it to church auction. Some coins which form a set of a country, may be interesting prize.



                      Last choice is sell it on eBay.






                      share|improve this answer














                      If you happen to visit a school show, where students show their hobbies, you will find that world coins are quite popular as a collection topic. You could perhaps give it a some collector.



                      Donate it to church auction. Some coins which form a set of a country, may be interesting prize.



                      Last choice is sell it on eBay.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Sep 3 '11 at 15:42









                      Ankur Banerjee♦

                      32.5k14116225




                      32.5k14116225










                      answered Sep 3 '11 at 10:36









                      P K Saha

                      992




                      992




















                          up vote
                          8
                          down vote













                          You can also try selling them on eBay and get most of your money back that way too. Some of the coins may be worth $1 or more on face value for just one, such as the Japanese Y500 yen or the British £1. So a "handful" can be worth over $20 easily. Donate it on the principle of giving can be another option.






                          share|improve this answer
























                            up vote
                            8
                            down vote













                            You can also try selling them on eBay and get most of your money back that way too. Some of the coins may be worth $1 or more on face value for just one, such as the Japanese Y500 yen or the British £1. So a "handful" can be worth over $20 easily. Donate it on the principle of giving can be another option.






                            share|improve this answer






















                              up vote
                              8
                              down vote










                              up vote
                              8
                              down vote









                              You can also try selling them on eBay and get most of your money back that way too. Some of the coins may be worth $1 or more on face value for just one, such as the Japanese Y500 yen or the British £1. So a "handful" can be worth over $20 easily. Donate it on the principle of giving can be another option.






                              share|improve this answer












                              You can also try selling them on eBay and get most of your money back that way too. Some of the coins may be worth $1 or more on face value for just one, such as the Japanese Y500 yen or the British £1. So a "handful" can be worth over $20 easily. Donate it on the principle of giving can be another option.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered Sep 28 '12 at 20:31









                              Anyone101

                              8911




                              8911




















                                  up vote
                                  7
                                  down vote













                                  There are a number of companies in the UK who exchange foreign coins. We had a whole load of foreign coins that we collected with our school and then sent them an organisation called Cash4Coins - they exchanged all the coins and once we'd agreed we were happy with the amount the money was in the bank in less than an hour. My son, who is at university is collecting foreign coins with his student union for charity... Cash4Coins also will collect for free if the coins weigh over 5kg.






                                  share|improve this answer






















                                  • It's worth noting, as @mindcorrosive pointed out to me, the site itself doesn't have the best online trust rating, so consider that before using it.
                                    – Mark Mayo♦
                                    Aug 23 '12 at 17:38














                                  up vote
                                  7
                                  down vote













                                  There are a number of companies in the UK who exchange foreign coins. We had a whole load of foreign coins that we collected with our school and then sent them an organisation called Cash4Coins - they exchanged all the coins and once we'd agreed we were happy with the amount the money was in the bank in less than an hour. My son, who is at university is collecting foreign coins with his student union for charity... Cash4Coins also will collect for free if the coins weigh over 5kg.






                                  share|improve this answer






















                                  • It's worth noting, as @mindcorrosive pointed out to me, the site itself doesn't have the best online trust rating, so consider that before using it.
                                    – Mark Mayo♦
                                    Aug 23 '12 at 17:38












                                  up vote
                                  7
                                  down vote










                                  up vote
                                  7
                                  down vote









                                  There are a number of companies in the UK who exchange foreign coins. We had a whole load of foreign coins that we collected with our school and then sent them an organisation called Cash4Coins - they exchanged all the coins and once we'd agreed we were happy with the amount the money was in the bank in less than an hour. My son, who is at university is collecting foreign coins with his student union for charity... Cash4Coins also will collect for free if the coins weigh over 5kg.






                                  share|improve this answer














                                  There are a number of companies in the UK who exchange foreign coins. We had a whole load of foreign coins that we collected with our school and then sent them an organisation called Cash4Coins - they exchanged all the coins and once we'd agreed we were happy with the amount the money was in the bank in less than an hour. My son, who is at university is collecting foreign coins with his student union for charity... Cash4Coins also will collect for free if the coins weigh over 5kg.







                                  share|improve this answer














                                  share|improve this answer



                                  share|improve this answer








                                  edited Sep 14 '12 at 6:38









                                  Mark Mayo♦

                                  128k745531265




                                  128k745531265










                                  answered Aug 23 '12 at 12:49









                                  Scott the brave

                                  7111




                                  7111











                                  • It's worth noting, as @mindcorrosive pointed out to me, the site itself doesn't have the best online trust rating, so consider that before using it.
                                    – Mark Mayo♦
                                    Aug 23 '12 at 17:38
















                                  • It's worth noting, as @mindcorrosive pointed out to me, the site itself doesn't have the best online trust rating, so consider that before using it.
                                    – Mark Mayo♦
                                    Aug 23 '12 at 17:38















                                  It's worth noting, as @mindcorrosive pointed out to me, the site itself doesn't have the best online trust rating, so consider that before using it.
                                  – Mark Mayo♦
                                  Aug 23 '12 at 17:38




                                  It's worth noting, as @mindcorrosive pointed out to me, the site itself doesn't have the best online trust rating, so consider that before using it.
                                  – Mark Mayo♦
                                  Aug 23 '12 at 17:38










                                  up vote
                                  6
                                  down vote













                                  If you have coins from 25 different countries, try selling them in bulk on ebay to collectors. This way you can even get what they are worth back (but usually a little less than their face value).






                                  share|improve this answer
























                                    up vote
                                    6
                                    down vote













                                    If you have coins from 25 different countries, try selling them in bulk on ebay to collectors. This way you can even get what they are worth back (but usually a little less than their face value).






                                    share|improve this answer






















                                      up vote
                                      6
                                      down vote










                                      up vote
                                      6
                                      down vote









                                      If you have coins from 25 different countries, try selling them in bulk on ebay to collectors. This way you can even get what they are worth back (but usually a little less than their face value).






                                      share|improve this answer












                                      If you have coins from 25 different countries, try selling them in bulk on ebay to collectors. This way you can even get what they are worth back (but usually a little less than their face value).







                                      share|improve this answer












                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered Jun 10 '12 at 16:17









                                      Tschareck

                                      3,29422649




                                      3,29422649















                                          protected by Community♦ Oct 4 '15 at 4:44



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