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After entering circulation, a coin is then graded using the numbers 1 to 58, with varying prefixes depending on the grade. A coin usually struck from a specially prepared coin die on a specially prepared planchet.
Use our guide to decipher what all the coin acronyms, abbreviations, and jargon are that you see online and in coin reference books.
For coins in circulated condition, Littleton’s experts use words or abbreviations, such as VG for “Very Good,” XF for “Extra Fine,” etc., to describe the appearance of a coin, while certi cation services use a combination of abbreviations with the addition of a numeric scale for all coin grades. Both are correct.
These U.S. coin grade letters, numbers, and abbreviations are the most common ones you need to know when grading coins at home yourself.
This document summarizes the grading standards and designations used by PCGS to grade coins. It outlines the grade levels from PO-1 to MS/PR-70 and provides short descriptions of the characteristics of coins at each grade level.
understand why your coin received a Details Grade, or non-numeric grade from NGC. There are just a few situations in which a coin will not be graded and encapsulated at all by NGC, and these conditions are found at the end of this booklet.
A price guide available on the internet listing approximate selling prices for PCGS graded coins of nearly every United States issue in multiple grades. These prices are compiled from electronic networks, auctions, price lists, coin shows, and so on.