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Coin Roll Hunting for Beginners: What You Can Realistically Still Find
Posted by NumisdexDealer· 0 replies
Getting Started with Coin Roll Hunting
Coin roll hunting (CRH) is the practice of buying rolls of coins from banks, searching through them for valuable coins, and returning the rest. It's one of the most accessible ways to get into coin collecting — the entry cost is the face value of the coins themselves, and everything you find is essentially free.
What You'll Need
- A comfortable sorting surface — A flat, well-lit workspace where you can spread out coins. Some hunters use a lap desk or a designated table.
- A loupe (5x-10x) — For examining coins more closely. Not every coin needs magnification, but when you spot something unusual, you'll want a closer look.
- A good light source — Natural daylight or a daylight-balanced LED positioned to illuminate coins from an angle.
- Coin tubes or wrappers — For rerolling the coins you don't keep. Most banks prefer coins returned in standard wrappers.
What's Realistically Findable
Pennies (Cents)
Cents are the most popular CRH denomination because of the large volume and variety of findable coins:
- Wheat cents (1909-1958) — Still found in rolls, though less frequently than a decade ago. Most are common dates worth 3-10 cents each.
- Pre-1982 copper cents — Worth approximately 2x face value for their copper content. These are becoming scarcer as they're gradually pulled from circulation.
- 1982 varieties — Check for the rare 1982-D Small Date Copper (weigh small-date D-mint 1982 cents).
- Errors and varieties — Doubled dies, RPMs, and die cracks are found regularly by experienced hunters.
Nickels
- War nickels (1942-1945 with large mint mark above Monticello) — Still found occasionally. These contain 35% silver.
- Buffalo nickels — Rare but not impossible in rolled nickels.
- Jefferson nickel errors — Full Steps coins and minor varieties are the main hunting targets.
Dimes
- Pre-1965 silver dimes — Roosevelt dimes from 1946-1964 are the realistic find. Mercury dimes are very rare in circulation. Worth about $2-3 each at current silver prices.
- Errors — Off-center strikes and other dramatic errors are rare but make excellent finds.
Quarters
- Pre-1965 silver quarters — Rare but still found. Each is worth about $5-6 in silver content.
- State/ATB/Women quarter errors — The many commemorative quarter programs have produced collectible errors.
- W-mint quarters (2019-2021) — West Point mint quarters were released into circulation as a promotion. Certain dates are scarce and collectible.
Half Dollars
- 40% silver halves (1965-1970) — The most realistic silver find in half dollar rolls. Worth about $3-4 each.
- 90% silver halves (1964 and earlier) — Rare but possible. Worth about $9-10 each.
Practical Tips
- Build a relationship with your bank — Explain what you're doing. Most banks are happy to sell you rolls. Some will even set aside unusual coins for you.
- Don't return coins to the same bank you got them from — Use one bank as your "buy" bank and another as your "dump" bank. This avoids searching your own rejects.
- Start with one denomination — Learn what to look for before spreading across all denominations. Cents are the best starting point.
- Keep your expectations realistic — Silver finds are exciting but infrequent. The joy of CRH is the search itself, not hitting a jackpot every box.
Share your finds in the Coin Roll Hunting forum — the community loves seeing what others pull from rolls.