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Would Anyone Ever Do This?

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 Posted 10/23/2025  02:12 am  Show Profile   Check Brandmeister's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add Brandmeister to your friends list
Not even for two figures. If you buy a brand-name slab with a specific grade, you could get an absolutely trash coin. There are many coins with corrosion problems, surface problems, fingerprints, scrapes and other issues in straight graded slabs.

Most people who are selling a decent quality coin are happy to show the coin to all potential buyers.
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Portugal
655 Posts
 Posted 10/23/2025  08:57 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jecz79 to your friends list
I would never ever buy a coin unseen. And never but an expensive coin without first having it in hand to examine. Outside any plastic holder.

Another question. How do coins that have so many units available for sale from a single vendor can get so expensive?
They are certainly not rare. Not even scarce. This corresponds to a common coin. Is that one you seek so much in demand that these high prices can still happen?

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 Posted 10/23/2025  09:09 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dearborn to your friends list
Nope, buying a coin for that much, NEEDS to be handled in person (coin in hand) Unless it is a reputable auction house.
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 Posted 10/23/2025  09:28 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
Not for five figures, no. Not even four figures, or likely even three.

Quote:
Not even for two figures.


I passed on many PCGS graded Ikes that used stock images. No, thank you.
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 Posted 10/23/2025  10:19 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Freespeech57 to your friends list
Simple answer, NO.
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 Posted 10/23/2025  1:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tdziemia to your friends list
For me it's a clear no for multiple reasons. Out of curiosity, what is the feedback number, and have you checked feedback on high $$ items?

However, if you really want to do this purchase, but with more protection (maybe?), you could PM the seller through the ebay system asking for a photo of the exact coin you will receive including the slab details if you buy today (or tomorrow). You then have a record in ebay of the coin that was promised, and if you do not receive it, they ( ebay) should honor their return policy.

If the seller won't do that, you walk.

As pointed out by jecz, if this seller has five, then others will appear on the market, unless there is something unusual about this type.
Edited by tdziemia
10/23/2025 1:13 pm
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Canada
21608 Posts
 Posted 10/23/2025  2:15 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add JimmyD to your friends list
Would you supply the 12 figure ID number so that we can see the listing.
Would like to see who the seller is.
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 Posted 10/23/2025  2:50 pm  Show Profile   Check Brandmeister's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add Brandmeister to your friends list
I could imagine a few scenarios where this would be less bonkers. For example, a modern gold coin where the value is 97% in the gold. At that point, all PCGS MS65 coins are essentially identical, because the value is the metal, not the numismatic coin. I personally still wouldn't do that deal, but it would be less crazy than for a purely numismatic rare coin.
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 Posted 11/06/2025  09:40 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CoinForMe to your friends list
(They are "Fake")
Never buy a high-priced coin on ebay from a seller who has multiple quantities or has sold copies of the same coin.
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Italy
284 Posts
 Posted 11/09/2025  04:27 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add joe_77 to your friends list
This post reminds me of when I was in the market for a modern-ish coin sold for around $200.
This seller had like 10 in the same grade and sent me a group pic of those coins.
I thus discovered he had used a random pic in the advert which was actually from a grade higher and asked him to let me choose which one I liked the most.
He then quickly replied "all equal, all frosted" and even shipped me a random one
He was shocked when I told him I was going to return the coin if I didn't like the one I got..

So, long story short: don't buy blind, always buy a specific coin!
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United Kingdom
51 Posts
 Posted 11/12/2025  01:58 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add dgwright to your friends list

Quote:
don't buy blind, always buy a specific coin!


Amen to that! The only time I buy 'sight unseen' is if it's a common, circulated coin that I want to add to my 'duplicates' stash. Otherwise I want to see the specific beast.

I also don't list coins like that; anything I list is a single piece with pics of that specific coin.
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United States
420 Posts
 Posted 11/12/2025  9:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add snitchard to your friends list
I usually have to use buy now, pay over time services (Affirm, Sezzle, etc.) for anything $40 and up. Whenever I buy from e-bay I'll check the prices for that same coin and check like Numismedia to see what the coin is worth in what condition. I collect very simple coins like proof sets, proof commemorative, and I just started collect unciirculated Kennedy half dollars, be very careful with ebay even if somebody has a high score, make sure before you buy.
Rich M. - Collector since 2008
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 Posted 11/14/2025  11:02 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add panzaldi to your friends list
well, the smart thing you did was post this here.
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 Posted 11/16/2025  1:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
well, the smart thing you did was post this here.
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