I guess I am not alone in having accumulated a jar of coins and small notes from trips abroad. When I moved house I was going to put them on eBay but the idea of sorting, photographing and packing etc etc was all a bit too much especially as some of them were no longer legal currency.
Anyway, I found a firm on the net, sent them off in one secure envelope, they apparently repatriate them when they have about 1000kg.
They sent me an offer to buy them, even the little 1 cent US coins. Said yes and the money arrived in my bank account. As the Meerkats say on that TV advert, "Simples".
Oh yes, it was cash4coins.co.UK.
Certain banks near the US Mexican border will exchange Mexican currency for US dollars.
Mexican Stock Exchange was created in 1933.
You can't exchange coins for gems. You can only exchange gems for coins. I don't know why, but the DragonVale company won't allow that to happen.
Not usually. Unlike Canadian coins which have roughly the same purchasing power and diameter as US coins and are frequently found in change (chances are you have something Canadian in your change jar, especially if you live close to the Canadian border), Mexican coins don't follow the same diameter and purchasing power so except for towns close to the border where they are readily exchanged to US dollars (and you'd pay them in the exchange rate of Pesos to dollar) most places will not take Mexican coins in payment.
No, Mexico and Argentina have different coins.
A place in port Elizabeth where I can exchange coins from 1965
they represent their mexican president that is living or has died.
you need 1600 coins and exchange your coins on prize exchange
Clyde Hubbard has written: 'Hookneck =' -- subject(s): Coins, Mexican, Mexican Coins
You can exchange one dollar bills for larger denominations or coins at a bank, currency exchange, or some retail stores.
get 1100 coins at the game corner and exchange them at the exchange store
it says in your coin