== == Mint State 60 is the lowest uncirculated grade.
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.
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.
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.
almost uncirculated
A proof grade can not be given to a uncirculated (Mint state) coin. The term Proof is actually refers to a method of manufacturing, not a grade. But proof coins are identified by the by a prefix of PF before the grade and mint state are MS
AU means almost uncirculated which is a grade for the coin, depending on the grade on the coin and the year of it, the value of the coin can be from $25 for the most common and lowest grade dollars all the way to $575,000 for the second highest grade, most rare silver dollar(1893S)(no proof 70 silver dollar has ever been found)
Coins are graded on a 70 point scale with the lowest numbers being the worst condition and the higher number being the better coins. Circulated grades are from 1 to 59 and from 60 to 70 are uncirculated grades. A grade of MS-67 is a very high grade and a coin with that grade would be uncirculated and would have very few imperfections. An MS-67 is a desirable grade.
"BU" means "Bright Uncirculated". However it's not a valid or meaningful coin grade. It's sort of a catch-phrase for any particularly shiny uncirculated coin. Actual uncirculated grades use the designation "MS", or Mint State, followed by a number ranging from 60 (the lowest possible condition for an uncirculated coin) up to 70, which effectively means that the coin is perfect. There are very specific criteria for those numeric designations and assigning them requires special training.
If it's not a high grade uncirculated coin spend it. If it is uncirculated you may get 25 cents if your lucky.
This coin is called a double eagle. In very fine condition 1,075$, in extremely fine condition, 1,100$, in about uncirculated condition 1,125$ , in high grade about uncirculated condition 1,150$, in low grade uncirculated condition 1,250$, in high grade uncirculated condition, 1,650$, and if proof, 27,500$. With a S mint mark; all the same except for high grade uncirculated which is 1,850$, not 1,650$. No proofs were made.
If you actually have this coin or not, it's very valuable. Circulated coins start at $6,000.00 in the lowest grade of G-4 and go up to $35,000.00 in AU -58. Uncirculated coins are $40,000.00 to $138,000.00 depending on the grade
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.