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Replies: 29 / Views: 2,935 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2470 Posts |
I'm a lifelong coin enthusiast. I had my hands on coins before I was 10, started starting my own 'collections' at about 11 or 12.. it's been an on-and-off thing but I am still at it at 56.. 
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
I agree that serious coin collecting is an older person's hobby, but to make very good sense of it, experience and a good depth of background knowledge is a particular advantage. That depth of knowledge comes with age. The other advantage is that in most cases, older collectors have more discretionary disposable income. BTW, I don't have a beard, and the top of my head is not like the dome on St Paul's cathedral !  But I am in the 66% group, and also like most, I started collecting in my 'teens.
Edited by sel_69l 04/11/2023 06:08 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7276 Posts |
Quote: Coin Collector Age Coin Collector Years Percentages 40+ years 66% 30-40 years 23% 20-30 years. 11% This is a pretty bad measure using %. The 20 to 40 and 30 to 40 are just a range of 10 years each (and 30 and 40 are counted twice), the 40+ covers 40-50 years. A good measure would have have pre 19. 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80+ That would have been a better measure. At 53 I don't consider myself old.
Edited by hfjacinto 04/11/2023 07:33 am
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7941 Posts |
World coins was part of how I got hooked as a kid. I loved geography, so being able to have coins from those far away places was a real trip.
Allowance money and then part-time job income as teenager would go pretty far when you could buy modern world coins at something like a quarter per coin from mail order coin dealers.
And, referring back to that other thread, I see the median age was 51. If that's a codger, I hate to think what I would be called at more than a decade past that.
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Valued Member
United States
218 Posts |
I got started when I was about 6 years old, looking through my dad's change jar. I'm in my early 20s now so I'm still much younger than most coin collectors. As a college student with little disposable income, most of my acquisitions have been circulation finds, with a limited amount of coin roll hunting in there. There was never a coin club at my high school, and there isn't one at my university either - but when I tell my friends about coin stuff, they at least seem to think it's somewhat interesting...
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
735 Posts |
No age bracket for us, pre-20  C'mon google atleast give us 1% 
I've been collecting for a couple years... Favorite Coin's are Standing Liberty quarters, Working on my type set | Coffee, Corvettes, Coins & the CCF what could be better?
Edited by Jakes Coins 04/11/2023 10:10 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3848 Posts |
I am 19, have been collecting for a few years, and likely going to stay active in the hobby to a degree my entire life.
Many people go through the phase of childhood interest, temporarily stopping with coins when raising a family and working a full time job, and getting back into coins in their 40's or 50's.
Suffering from bust half fever. Want to learn how to attribute early half dollars by die variety? Click Here: http://goccf.com/t/434955Shoot me a PM if you are looking to sell bust halves.
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Moderator
 United States
96123 Posts |
Quote: At 53 I don't consider myself old. but at 61 (almost) I do consider myself old(er) and I feel every year that was inflicted on me.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4233 Posts |
By my reckoning 3 out of 20 unique responses to this thread are under 20. That's 15%. We need an accurate survey.
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Pillar of the Community
Russian Federation
1557 Posts |
I agree that numismatics is a hobby that requires a sufficient amount of money. Every year your requests grow and your interests expand. That's why you want more coins and no lower than VF/XF. I am 22, I started collecting coins at the age of 14. Ie, I have been in this hobby for more than 8 years.
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Moderator
 United States
96123 Posts |
Quote: That's why you want more coins and no lower than VF/XF When searching out coins for my collection, my standards are a bit higher - I search out BU and proofs first, and if I cannot find the coin I need in that condition, I slowly lower my expatiations until I find the coin I want, knowing that I got it at the highest affordable grade.
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Valued Member
United States
470 Posts |
I started into this hobby when I was five and my Dad gave me some German coins from the war. Stopped when I was 24 when my collection was stolen. Now started again at 72 as I missed it. I'm sending little coin sets to all my grandchildren to see if anything sparks an interest (6 of them ages ranging from 2 to 27). I feel the hobby can be an enjoyable experience and distraction at any level, any age. I am having fun from seeking out more expensive coins (to me) that I just like, to the renewed excitement of going through change and a few rolls to see what pops up. Hoping I can get a grandkid's interest!
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Valued Member
United States
345 Posts |
61 here ... just a theory, the coolest coins (my opinion) cost a bit more money and "older" people have more of it :)
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Valued Member
United States
470 Posts |
I was an avid collect from age 5 until I was 24. Then my collection was stolen. So I went on a 50 year hiatus from coins and only collected stamps as nobdy steals stamps. Now after nearly 50 years I am back and loving it. Did not realize how much I missed it.
And yes, I overkill the organizing, cataloging and arranging the coins. The more complex the better!
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Replies: 29 / Views: 2,935 |