Tampa Coin Dealer pays cash for rare coins, bullion, and full collections from sellers across Tampa Bay. Ring us for a no-pressure quote tied to spot, type, and condition.
Inherited box of Morgans from a relative in St. Pete? Sock-drawer hoard you started in the '80s? Single Saint-Gaudens you found in a safety deposit box? Same process. Call, describe, learn what it's worth.
Single coins, partial sets, whole estates. No floor, no ceiling. A two-minute call or a half-hour walkthrough, both fine.
Melt value is a floor, not a ceiling. Date, mint mark, condition, and rarity usually move a coin's price more than its weight in gold.
An 1881-S Morgan is a $30 coin in average condition. An 1893-S Morgan in the same grade is a five-figure piece. Date and mint matter more than people think.
Coins ride the Sheldon 70-point scale. MS-63 versus MS-65 can mean a 5x price jump on the same date. A PCGS or NGC slab removes the guesswork.
Gold and silver spot prices bounce daily, sometimes hourly. Bullion quotes track spot tight. Numismatic premiums ride collector demand on top of that.
Coins or photos in front of you helps. A verbal description gets the call started just fine.
Series, date, mint, condition. We ask about slabs, grading paperwork, holders, and any original mint packaging.
The firm number lands in person. On the phone we give a fair range so you know whether to drive in from Wesley Chapel.
Sell, sit on it, or pass. Same-day cash whenever you're ready.
Nothing here is required. We can ID coins live on the phone. But if any of this is easy to grab first, the call goes quicker.
No. Plenty of coins we buy in Tampa are raw. A PCGS or NGC slab locks in the grade and usually nudges the offer up, but it's not required. On a five-figure coin, slabbing first sometimes pays for itself. We'll tell you on the call.
Either. No minimum. One Saint-Gaudens double eagle, a tube of Silver Eagles, or a shoebox of inherited Morgans, the call works the same.
That's most of the inherited collections we see across Tampa Bay. Read off a year and a denomination and we can usually ID it on the phone. We'll tell you what's scrap and what's a keeper.
Bullion is priced off the live spot for gold or silver. Eagles, Krugerrands, and Maples each carry their own small premium over melt depending on what's moving that week.
Bad wear, scratches, or harsh cleaning can knock a numismatic coin all the way down to melt. Worn bullion still hits melt, though. We'll be straight on the call about which bucket your coin lands in.