Rocky Mountain Coin
9625 E ARAPAHOE RD C, GREENWOOD VILLAGE, CO 80112, UNITED STATES
Rocky Mountain Coin is a Denver, CO coin and precious-metal dealer that comes up around fair market pricing and numismatic / collector-grade coins.
What this desk does
When you reach Rocky Mountain Coin in Denver, CO, the dispatch line will usually offer a general services menu. This page comes before that: documented signals, gaps, and the right questions. Public-source signals for this coin-dealer-gold-buyer listing surface 5 cues: fair market price, numismatic expertise, bullion buying/selling, scrap gold buying, estate coin collections. Use them as the anchor of the dispatch conversation, not as a guarantee of crew skill. Best-fit use cases (3): Selling gold, silver, or scrap jewelry; Appraising rare or inherited coin collections; Buying or selling bullion and precious metals. If your situation does not fit, ask whether they actually take that kind of job before booking. Useful pre-call checks: who actually shows up to the job; whether the company stocks parts; whether the estimate covers labor and parts separately; whether there is a callback guarantee on completed work. Continental climates (CO) blend hot summers and cold winters; both ends of the year produce different jobs that a good local provider should be ready for. Honduras Collectibles does not certify this provider or promise outcomes. The page summarizes public-source signals and editorial questions to make the dispatch call more productive.
Capability signals
The signals below are flagged when at least two of three sources — the public listing, the dealer's website, and customer review excerpts — corroborate the capability. We do not weight signals; presence or absence is the only state we record.
- Fair market pricing — with medium confidence
- Numismatic — with high confidence
- Bullion — with high confidence
- Scrap gold — with high confidence
- Estate collections — with medium confidence
How this desk compares to the alternatives
The table below is a generic comparison for the kinds of choices a seller faces, not a ranking. The "this dealer" column is filled in based on signals on file; other columns describe typical channel behavior.
| This dealer | Major auction house | Pawn shop | Online marketplace | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Speed | Same-day appraisal + cash/check | 8–16 weeks (consign + auction + payout) | Same-day cash, no appraisal | 2–6 weeks (list + sell + ship) |
| Net price | Fair for bullion, mid for raw | Highest for rarities $25k+ | Low (30–50% of melt) | Variable; high effort per piece |
| Best for | Bullion, scrap, mid-tier raw, estates | Single rarities, large estates | Emergency cash only | Common slabbed coins, niche collectors |
| Fees you owe | Nothing — they buy outright | 5–20% seller fee + buyer's premium | Nothing | 10–13% platform fee + shipping |
What to bring with you
- Photo ID. Federal anti-money-laundering rules require it for any precious-metal transaction.
- Pricing questions. Ask how the desk weighs the lot, verifies purity, applies fees, and records the percentage of spot or itemized numismatic value.
- Original packaging. US Mint sets, proof boxes, certificates — they raise the offer even if the coin itself is the same piece.
- Grading slabs. PCGS / NGC / ANACS / ICG slabs trade at known levels; bring all of them, even cracked-out cases.
- Provenance docs. Probate paperwork, original purchase receipts, prior insurance schedules.
- An inventory list. For mixed lots over a few hundred dollars, a written inventory keeps both sides honest.
- A second opinion. If a single piece is potentially worth four figures, get two written offers before you sell.
Frequently asked at the counter
- Will they appraise without obligation?
- Most coin and bullion dealers will give a verbal appraisal for free if you might be selling — that's the standard. A written appraisal for insurance or estate purposes usually costs $50-200 or 1-2% of value because it requires more documentation.
- How do I know the offer is fair?
- For bullion, check the day's spot price as a reference only (kitco.com or APMEX), then ask how the shop calculates its actual bid: weight, purity, spread, premium, fees, and payment method. For numismatics, look up the coin on the PCGS Price Guide or NGC for retail comparables. If the offer is way below those marks without a clear reason, get a second opinion.
- Should I clean my coins before bringing them in?
- No. Cleaning a coin almost always reduces its value, sometimes by 50% or more — graders mark cleaned coins as damaged. Even a soft cloth can leave hairlines visible under magnification.
- Cash, check, or wire — and is there a max payout?
- Smaller transactions are usually cash or check on the spot. Anything over $10,000 in cash triggers federal IRS Form 8300 reporting. Many dealers cap same-day cash at $5,000-10,000 and pay the rest by check or wire — ask before driving over with high-value items.
- What should I confirm before accepting?
- Confirm store identity, dealer credentials, scale visibility, purity test, fee schedule, ID requirements, local hold-period rules, and whether the receipt lists weight, purity, and the percentage of spot applied. Directory notes do not replace a written professional valuation.
What the rules say in Colorado
Many states regulate precious-metals dealers more loosely than others, but federal anti-money-laundering rules still apply: photo ID for every transaction, written record of buys above a small threshold, and IRS reporting on certain large or repeated cash sales.
Editorial note. We are an independent directory and do not buy or sell coins, broker transactions, certify dealers, promise quotes, or publish live dealer offers. Information here is sourced from public listings, the dealer's own website, and customer reviews. Spot-price references are educational only; actual pricing depends on the shop's spread, weight, purity, premium, condition, scarcity, fees, ID rules, and payment method. This page is not a substitute for professional valuation or investment advice.
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