MS-65 and MS-60 are grades of uncirculated coins. MS-60 is the lowest grade of the uncirculated coins while MS-70 is the highest grade. Grade is determined by the number of nicks or scratches on an uncirculated coin. The higher the MS number the fewer flaws (nicks etc.) there are on the coin.
"ms-65 is a grade in numismatics (coins) and is a desirable grade because it means that it is in a better condition than uncirculated (unspent)." Alex Masella
Yes there is. Uncirculated coins do have different grades that run from MS-60 to MS-70. The term brilliant uncirculated is the grade (MS-65) given to a coin that is above average with full mint luster, very few contact marks, excellent eye appeal.
If you mean a 1882cc Morgan dollar in MS-65 retail price is $400.00 to $500.00
A uncirculated 1973 Kennedy half dollar graded MS-60 is valued at $1.15 in MS-63 $1.44 in MS-65 $20.80
MS stands for "mint state" and refers to a coin that is in uncirculated condition. The highest grade is MS-70 which is a nearly flawless coin that is rarely attained. MS-60 is the lowest grade of uncirculated coins. Go to PCGS website for coin values.
Assuming the coin is not cleaned, and is in original uncirculated condition, then it has the following values, based on grade : MS-63 -- $50 MS-64 -- $150 MS-65 -- $400
If the coin is a Gem-BU (MS-65) grade, retail value is about $20.00, if it's not at that grade level the value is for the silver at $6.50
The term MS-65 is the grade of the coin, which is "Gem Uncirculated" a better than average coin.
Full gem red 1946-S grade MS-65 are going for about $15
In MS-60 condition, the lowest uncirculated grade, this coin retails for about $200. In MS-65, that value jumps to about $500. Given those figures it would be worth having a professional, in-person appraisal performed.
About $3.00 in MS-65