I want to tell you why I wrote this.
Over the past year I've heard from a lot of people in the same situation. They inherited a coin collection from someone they loved. They had no idea what they were looking at. And before they had a chance to figure it out, they walked into a coin shop, got a number that sounded reasonable, and said yes.
Most of them found out later they left real money behind.
Not because they were careless. Not because they were naive. Just because nobody had told them what to watch out for before they walked in that door.
That kept bothering me. Because the information exists. It's just buried under years of collector jargon and forum debates that assume you already know what you're doing.
So I wrote it all down. Plainly. In order. Without assuming anything.
It's called The Inherited Coin Collection Handbook and it's the most useful thing I've put together since starting Numisteria.
Seven chapters covering everything from the very first thing you should do when you inherit a collection — and the one thing you should never do — all the way through to getting paid fairly when you're ready to sell. Plus a bonus cheat sheet you'll come back to again and again.
It's a PDF. It's $9. It is a great read.
And honestly? If it helps even one person avoid the conversation I keep hearing about — "I wish I'd known that before I sold" — then it was worth every minute I spent writing it.
If you've inherited coins, or you know someone who has, this is the guide I wish existed when I started.
That's it from me today. No fluff. Just — I made something I'm proud of and I think it'll genuinely help you.
Talk soon — August
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