If you mean a mint set they are coins specially packaged by the mint for sale to collectors and have Uncirculated specimens of all denomination issued for that year from each mint.
The were 35,000 New Zealand 1968 Uncirculated coin sets issued.
Uncirculated sets have been made for many years. Please post a new question for a specific date.
"Uncirculated" means "never been spent, never been in change" so by definition any coin you find in your pocket change can't be uncirculated. An uncirculated coin can be obtained from a bank if they've just gotten a bag or rolls of new coins from the Treasury. Also the US Mint sells sets of uncirculated coins to collectors and dealers, so that's another set of sources.
Buy one of each. Proof sets will always have less total numbers. But, sometimes the uncirculated coins outperform them in the long run.
Yes of course you can if you have uncirculated money its the same as (monies) so you can spend it.
NO, they do not. That's the simple answer.
August 10, 2009 In 1964 the US Mint sold 1,008,108 Uncirculated Mint Sets for $2.40 each. Today those sets are valued at $26.
I have got many new uncirculated 100's right at my local bank.
It depends on if the sets are Proof or Uncirculated and the years of the sets. Post new question.
There were 1,297,094 Uncirculated mint sets sold for $8 each in 1993 and it is worth $10 today.
An official "US Mint Set" is a Uncirculated coin set. They have uncirculated examples of every denomination issued from each mint for the year of issue. They are the same.
If you received it at a store or anywhere other than a bank, by definition it's now circulated. If you got it from a bank and it's crisp and unfolded, it's most likely uncirculated.