NCCA (National Coin Certification Association?) I'm not sure what the initials actually stand for. All I know of this company is that it exists or at least existed. (4/01) I do not own one of their slabs and have only seen one scan of a slab that was sent to me by E-mail. (...
PCGS Price Guidehttps://www.pcgs.com/prices/default.aspx More Coin Selling Tips & Links Certified coins are easier to sell, more liquid, and fetch higher prices than non-certified coins. It generally costs between $20-$50 to get a coin certified by a major certification/grading company. ...
Of course, the informal grading you do yourself is no replacement for professional third-party certification. The two leading coin grading companies are Numismatic Guaranty Corporation (NGC) andProfessional Coin Grading Service (PCGS). They are the industry standard and provide a great deal of useful...
PCGS Coinfacts and Photograde: The Professional Coin Grading Service was the first company to offer certification and condition grading for rare coins. Their online resources include Coinfacts, where you can learn the rarity of your coins; and Photograde Online, which allows you to see what each...
(Numismatic Guaranty Corporation) andPCGS (Professional Coin Grading Service). A third such firm isANACS, an acronym that originally stood for “American Numismatic Association Certification Service,” though it is no longer directly connected with the ANA. See the article on Page 8 of this issue...
PCGS or NGC or other legal government The classification of the institution. If it is a government coin, it must be in the original packaging; if it is selling precious metals, it must have an anti-money laundering plan, and if necessary, provide a copy to Amazon; coins with a price ...
Coins are evaluated based on their mint volumes, condition, and mint marks. And the top coin appraisers are NGC (Numismatic Guaranty Corporation), PCGS (Professional Coin Grading Service), and ANACS (American Numismatic Association Certification Service). ...