Home U.S. Coin Forum

What will happen to your collection?

What will happen to your collection after you leave the hobby? Do you see yourself with the potential to be a life-long collector? Options include:

1. sell immediately before death as to not leave the burden with your heirs
2. sell while still in good health before becoming senile, use an intelligent strategy for the biggest payoff
3. leave to an heir with intention of creating a new numismatist and an heirloom collection to last generations (what's the likelihood of that???)
4. allow the heir to inherit and liquidate the collection
5. sell while still interested in the hobby and move on
6. put it in the closet or attic and forget about it, make no memo in your will other than a description of 'miscellaneous items'

Do you plan to sell your collection yourself or leave your heirs with the responsibility of selling the collection? If leaving to heirs, what do you feel is important to educate them of proper liquidation? If your heirs have not yet reached adult hood, assume they have absolutely no interest whatsoever in coins and would rather have the money, regardless of any amount.

Does anyone on the board have hopes of leaving a collection to an heir and creating a numismatist in the process?

«1

Comments

  • JJSingletonJJSingleton Posts: 1,401 ✭✭✭✭✭
    My instructions are very clear. Bury me with my coins.image

    These are good questions but for me there are way to many variables to answer at this time. My executor has been given lots of information regarding my collection with instructions on how to sell. But this will only come to play if I should have an unforeseen death. I hope to live for 30 more years and therefore don't know what I will do with my collection over that time. I do suspect I will sell prior to my death as presently I have no children with any interest, other than what it's worth. They have been little money grubbers since they were born.image

    Joseph J. Singleton - First Superintendent of the U.S. Branch Mint in Dahlonega Georgia

    Findley Ridge Collection
    About Findley Ridge

  • Sell while I'm alive (hopefully - as long as that is in my control)
  • derrybderryb Posts: 37,771 ✭✭✭✭✭
    It will be sold off by my two kids. It is part of their inheritance. It will have served it's purpose in giving me pleasure in collecting and viewing.

    No Way Out: Stimulus and Money Printing Are the Only Path Left

  • TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 44,653 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I bought a shop to sell my collection. Wrong answer.
  • AMRCAMRC Posts: 4,280 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Standard advice I tell people is to sell it before you die (of course if that is possible). Do not leave your children coins, unless they want coins. Leave them the money. I cannot tell you the number of times the sale by the family is done without the real time and patience that the collector would have put into the liquidation in order to maximize the return.

    Of course if you are one of those that has nothing but very high end graded coins, then a simple "send it to auction" in your will, will do. But I still do not recommend it, because 4 months to see the money is a long time for a person with dollar signs in their eyes to wait and funny things can happen.

    MLAeBayNumismatics: "The greatest hobby in the world!"
  • BAJJERFANBAJJERFAN Posts: 31,417 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Another bummer is that the person [other than yourself] who could be a big help in selling your coins might kick the bucket before you do.
    theknowitalltroll;
  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,453 ✭✭✭✭✭
    My will states that my heirs must complete certain collections before they can be sold. And if they fail, the terms are binding on their heirs. As many generations as it takes. I don't give up easy.


    image
    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • Rayman311Rayman311 Posts: 423 ✭✭✭


    << <i>My will states that my heirs must complete certain collections before they can be sold. And if they fail, the terms are binding on their heirs. As many generations as it takes. I don't give up easy.


    image >>



    That awkward moment when you laugh at this response and then realize this ain't no joke.
  • Mission16Mission16 Posts: 1,413 ✭✭✭


    << <i>

    << <i>My will states that my heirs must complete certain collections before they can be sold. And if they fail, the terms are binding on their heirs. As many generations as it takes. I don't give up easy.


    image >>



    That awkward moment when you laugh at this response and then realize this ain't no joke. >>




    image
  • CeephusCeephus Posts: 73 ✭✭
    I have no kids. Will probably leave it, in its entirety, to a person who has a life long interest in the hobby. It will not go to a dealer.

    And YES, my name will be on everything to ensure my legacy.


  • << <i>

    << <i>My will states that my heirs must complete certain collections before they can be sold. And if they fail, the terms are binding on their heirs. As many generations as it takes. I don't give up easy.


    image >>



    That awkward moment when you laugh at this response and then realize this ain't no joke. >>



    I hope the set isn't all US Patterns. That would be a cruel joke
  • JBNJBN Posts: 1,922 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Surprising number of individuals recommending sale before you die.

    Leave detailed instructions for the sale of the collection. Your heirs will not have any capital gains taxes.

    Selling before your death exposes you to capital gains taxes.

    It is your collection - don't give the government a chunk of its value.
  • Walkerguy21DWalkerguy21D Posts: 11,753 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I'm going with choice 2. sell while still in good health before becoming senile, use an intelligent strategy for the biggest payoff.

    At least that's the plan.....I would like to 'play dealer' and set up at FUN some year and liquidate all the important items there.
    Bulk generic silver dollars and whatnot can go to the heirs.

    I did tell my wife this week, after seeing the prices on nice early copper at Summer FUN, that in the event of my untimely demise, do NOT
    sell my large cents cheap!


    Successful BST transactions with 171 members. Ebeneezer, Tonedeaf, Shane6596, Piano1, Ikenefic, RG, PCGSPhoto, stman, Don'tTelltheWife, Boosibri, Ron1968, snowequities, VTchaser, jrt103, SurfinxHI, 78saen, bp777, FHC, RYK, JTHawaii, Opportunity, Kliao, bigtime36, skanderbeg, split37, thebigeng, acloco, Toninginthblood, OKCC, braddick, Coinflip, robcool, fastfreddie, tightbudget, DBSTrader2, nickelsciolist, relaxn, Eagle eye, soldi, silverman68, ElKevvo, sawyerjosh, Schmitz7, talkingwalnut2, konsole, sharkman987, sniocsu, comma, jesbroken, David1234, biosolar, Sullykerry, Moldnut, erwindoc, MichaelDixon, GotTheBug
  • AnkurJAnkurJ Posts: 11,370 ✭✭✭✭
    Give collection to kids and ask them to keep intact if possible. If the kids don't want it or aren't interested, sell via auction.
    All coins kept in bank vaults.
    PCGS Registries
    Box of 20
    SeaEagleCoins: 11/14/54-4/5/12. Miss you Larry!
  • RYKRYK Posts: 35,800 ✭✭✭✭✭
    At this rate, Boosibri will own it all before I turn 50!


  • << <i>Surprising number of individuals recommending sale before you die.

    Leave detailed instructions for the sale of the collection. Your heirs will not have any capital gains taxes.

    Selling before your death exposes you to capital gains taxes.

    It is your collection - don't give the government a chunk of its value. >>





    Depending on your estate situation that step up in basis isn't free.
  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,453 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I hope the set isn't all US Patterns. That would be a cruel joke


    Reminds me of a cruel joke played by one of the all-time greatest European collectors, who passed away in 1922. His will stated that only his duplicates could be sold on his death. The primary collection - now probably worth well north of $50 million - was not to be sold until 100 years later. No living heir would see the money, and no living collectors would get to buy the coins. Gotta love it!
    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • Cougar1978Cougar1978 Posts: 8,861 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Option 2 - The purpose of my coin business is primarily to finance another hobby (I am lifetime VIP Ritz Houston, and Ricks Cabaret). When that time comes I will liquidate all of it to apply to my other hobbies, interests. I have no desire to leave it to any heirs. I would want to blow it all before this life ends and this happening hopefully after some big bullion runup. My holdings consist of numismatic coins (mainly whats listed at website, if I can't sell it for a decent profit then I am not buying unless its a really good deal), a large bullion related investment (Mod Commems, ASE, AGE, AGB), and paper money (goal is high profit).

    I have given up on coins as an investment - the goal is now to flip / retail - buy low - sell high. One only needs to see the graphs in the CCDN.......
    Investor
  • SoCalBigMarkSoCalBigMark Posts: 2,804 ✭✭✭✭✭
    My nephews will go to Key West with the proceeds and visit with Tumuss for his visitor friendly tour.image
  • BoosibriBoosibri Posts: 12,432 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>At this rate, Boosibri will own it all before I turn 50! >>



    So the question is what will my will state about RYK's coins...
  • Type2Type2 Posts: 13,985 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I hope to sell off my coins befor then little by little to off set my retirement. If any are left they can have them. But like most here i cant stop buying. Sell 10 or 20, Buy 20 or 30. image


    Hoard the keys.
  • pcunixpcunix Posts: 620
    Going to my kids unless the world falls apart and we are desperate for cash. And even if that happens I still might just conveniently "forget" those SDB's.

    The kids can sell them, keep them or give them to someone else, their choice. Neither of them will need money (again, unless the world falls apart) so it really will be a choice,

  • RYKRYK Posts: 35,800 ✭✭✭✭✭
    My collection has waxed and waned over the last twelve years (after being mostly dormant for the previous 25).

    If I achieve a "normal" life expectancy, I plan to sell all of the coins before I pass away, possibly many years before I pass away, with the exception of a few with sentimental value and relatively little monetary value.

    If I die unexpectedly, there are instructions to contact a trusted dealer-friend (although perhaps I should substitute Boosibri!) who is aware and will assist in the dismantling of the collection. That said, ....

    If I died on my morning run today, the disposal of the collection would be far, far, far down on the list of financial or practical concerns for my wife, and I would not be surprised if she does not get to it for years--or maybe even the kids would have to deal with it when she passes.
  • 291fifth291fifth Posts: 24,741 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Don't die with your collection. Collectibles cause nothing but problems for heirs.

    I have already taken my own advice. What is left of my collection is worth about $500 and I won't be making any more retail collectible purchases.

    It is still possible I may trade in coins or other collectibles but it will be as a business venture and not a collection.

    All glory is fleeting.
  • NapNap Posts: 1,755 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>
    Reminds me of a cruel joke played by one of the all-time greatest European collectors, who passed away in 1922. His will stated that only his duplicates could be sold on his death. The primary collection - now probably worth well north of $50 million - was not to be sold until 100 years later. No living heir would see the money, and no living collectors would get to buy the coins. Gotta love it! >>



    Should be coming on the market soon then.


    My wife always threatens me that she will take my collection to a pawn or bullion shop and say 'are these worth anything?'

    She won't really do that but she knows how to give me the willies. She would prefer to donate my collection to a museum if I predecease her, something I can't really argue with, although my collection is hardly museum worthy. Don't have kids yet. Sure that will change everything.
  • BoosibriBoosibri Posts: 12,432 ✭✭✭✭✭
    If I were to drop today my collection would be held in trust for my 2 year old until he hits the ripe old age of 30 with special instructions for him depending on what he chooses to do with them. If there is an emergency as determined by my trust manager the coins can be liquidated via a specified dealer. If the dealer is no longer active, the coins should be sold via Heritage.

    As I am in my early 30's I certainly hold to either pass them directly to him or sell them before I kick the bucket.
  • crypto79crypto79 Posts: 8,623
    I will one day sell and use it as part of a down payment on a beach house in Dewey Beach while my kids are still young enough. If I don't make it much further I have trusted coin god parents points of contact who have agreed to walk my wife through the liquidation process. Hopefully a couple that are symbolic of my collection will be set aside and given to a few people in my life but I won't care at that point as I'll be worm food.
  • OKbustchaserOKbustchaser Posts: 5,552 ✭✭✭✭✭
    They're going to the crematorium with me.











    Actually, they will go to my kids. As for what they will do with them I couldn't care less. Sell them for 100X their market value or 1/100X their market value it's all the same to me--I didn't acquire the coins for their benefit. By the time they get it the collection will have already accomplished its mission...50+ years of personal enjoyment even if I should kick off tonight.
    Just because I'm old doesn't mean I don't love to look at a pretty bust.
  • rickoricko Posts: 98,724 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I don't care.... dead is dead. Cheers, RickO
  • I will sell mine. because all I have to leave it to are money mongers. I think I will leave what I have left to APL...to help keep Dogs alive.
    I would like to leave it to my heirs. but my feelings about them are not good!
  • TPRCTPRC Posts: 3,814 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>I hope the set isn't all US Patterns. That would be a cruel joke


    Reminds me of a cruel joke played by one of the all-time greatest European collectors, who passed away in 1922. His will stated that only his duplicates could be sold on his death. The primary collection - now probably worth well north of $50 million - was not to be sold until 100 years later. No living heir would see the money, and no living collectors would get to buy the coins. Gotta love it! >>



    Opportunity knocks!!! Only 8 more years!

    Tom

  • This content has been removed.
  • bsshog40bsshog40 Posts: 3,974 ✭✭✭✭✭
    If it comes down to dying and I die before my wife, she will have it. No one else has any interest in coins and the kids are grown. Luckily my wife has gotten more interest in my hobby as I explain what I have to her. I hope I also have at least another 30 yrs left in me and be coherent. Lol Otherwise, I plan on collecting as long as I can. If retirement becomes financially cumbersome, then I may have to sell things here and there.
  • BaleyBaley Posts: 22,663 ✭✭✭✭✭
    At this point, about halfway through statistical life expectancy, the 6 scenarios are all possible. I'd like to leave a very nice core collection to the next generation, but as a legacy for their kids rather than a burden to be squabbled over and split up and hocked.

    If I dropped dead unenexpectedly, there are receipts, books, and past conversations about the coins, and of course the internet. If my widow or orphans ever shows up here asking what she should do with them, be kind to them, eh?

    Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry

  • ambro51ambro51 Posts: 13,962 ✭✭✭✭✭
    It's not "My Collection". I am not the 'end user' of these very old objects. Just as has happened over and over in the life of these coins.... An ownership cycle will continue.
  • MowgliMowgli Posts: 1,219


    << <i>Standard advice I tell people is to sell it before you die (of course if that is possible). Do not leave your children coins, unless they want coins. Leave them the money. I cannot tell you the number of times the sale by the family is done without the real time and patience that the collector would have put into the liquidation in order to maximize the return.

    Of course if you are one of those that has nothing but very high end graded coins, then a simple "send it to auction" in your will, will do. But I still do not recommend it, because 4 months to see the money is a long time for a person with dollar signs in their eyes to wait and funny things can happen. >>



    I would guess that anyone with a valuable/sizable coin collection has lots of other liquid assets which a four month delay would not be a problem.
    In the land of the blind the one-eyed man is king.
  • This content has been removed.
  • TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 44,653 ✭✭✭✭✭

    … the grandchildren will be bullied at school for having a complete set of Susan B. Anthony dollars they brought to "Show & Tell" image
  • ElcontadorElcontador Posts: 7,714 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Surprising number of individuals recommending sale before you die.

    Leave detailed instructions for the sale of the collection. Your heirs will not have any capital gains taxes.

    Selling before your death exposes you to capital gains taxes.

    It is your collection - don't give the government a chunk of its value. >>



    You are assuming that the coins will be worth more upon the owner's death than what he paid for them. I would not necessarily make that assumption.
    "Vou invadir o Nordeste,
    "Seu cabra da peste,
    "Sou Mangueira......."
  • scotty1419scotty1419 Posts: 933 ✭✭✭


    << <i>I hope the set isn't all US Patterns. That would be a cruel joke


    Reminds me of a cruel joke played by one of the all-time greatest European collectors, who passed away in 1922. His will stated that only his duplicates could be sold on his death. The primary collection - now probably worth well north of $50 million - was not to be sold until 100 years later. No living heir would see the money, and no living collectors would get to buy the coins. Gotta love it! >>



    Id love to read up on this if there's a link?
  • crypto79crypto79 Posts: 8,623


    << <i>I don't care.... dead is dead. Cheers, RickO >>



    image

    But would add it took me years to know what to do and I don't expect my fam to be able to replicate that in a short period of time and I want it to be rather painless on them.
  • ARCOARCO Posts: 4,435 ✭✭✭✭✭
    My wish would be to pass a sweet-@rse collection off to my kids for them to enjoy and to continue on and grow. HAAHAHAAHHAHAHA...not going to happen - EVER.

    So, it looks like I am going to roll the dice with coins. Truth is, I am a full blown addict / hoarder. I couldn't stop buying if I tried. My family has zero interest, so I am stuck between enjoying the hobby and gambling on my family's financial future (should I die before I can liquidate).

    No game plan, just going to keep buying and buying and buying and hope that a cure for my addiction becomes available before I die.

    Tyler
  • This is always a question I worry about.

    We are all young if we so passionately collect coins like this, so why worry about it now?

    Here's why.. because their are two guarantees in our lifetime. Death & Taxes. (Sorry to put it bluntly)

    Death, we can't cheat you. So for us coin collectors who have amassed a huge collection of wonderful coins, where are our babies going to go once you come knocking at our door?
    I would love to have a personal relationship with a woman who I can trust and leave it all to her, otherwise, I can donate it all to charity. I don't believe in freebies. Meaning, and not to take this into a what a woman's role should be thread, but I love my collection, no matter what, I hate to have it parted onto somebody else especially when that person has no clue or appreciation for all the long hard years it took to put into building it. So why should they just "get it" because they were around 30 years of my life? I can find other things to leave them, but a coin collection or proceeds from it just turns my heart for some reason...

    With that being said, we can open a museum, or donate them to a museum all under our estate so they can be shown off for the world to see.. One person mentioned here finding someone in the family who plans on continuing the legacy... (boy we are such coin weenies!) or we can hide them away and never let them see the light of day and then one day when the Saddle Ridge Hoard part 2 comes along, then we can get our name and pedigree featured on a prominent gold PCGS label and be traded amongst the bourse floor for hardly any premium!


    Hard question to really answer in the end, but I'd rather stay alive and enjoy them till I'm 90, sell em off and spend all the money between me and my sig. other and enjoy the last few years of my conscious life! JD
  • Like Boosibri, mine will go into a trust but for my great-granddaughter, thus skipping 2 generations, to prevent any family squabble on what to do with it. A non-family related individual has been designated as the executor as another precaution with very specific instructions.
  • 291fifth291fifth Posts: 24,741 ✭✭✭✭✭
    If your coins are donated to a museum it is most likely that they will be put away in a vault and forgotten. Over time, they may even be looted or become damaged due to poor storage.

    It is interesting to read some of the responses to this thread because they seem to reflect a wish to maintain control of a collection from the grave.

    A few years back, as a college photography class project, I went down to one of the older Detroit cemeteries and took some photos in the fog of various burial sites of the rich and famous of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Their mausoleums were most impressive and obviously very expensive ...
    but ... they are just as dead as the folks in the low rent district of the cemetery and they aren't coming back.

    I've said it before and I will say it again. The present belongs to the living. They shouldn't have to be controlled by directives sent from the grave.
    All glory is fleeting.
  • ms70ms70 Posts: 13,956 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I already went down this path & came back after a number of years. I sold the big stuff through Heritage & the little stuff on eBay. After all the juice was taken out I broke out
    slightly ahead which was fine. I was in it for the fun and the chase, not as an investment.

    Now I'm back and if I bow out again I'll probably do the same thing.

    Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.

  • jdimmickjdimmick Posts: 9,795 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I plan on liquidating before I pass. If I were to get sick , I would start selling them off while I was alive.

    If I were to go unexpectedly , Who know's what would happen, my family doesn't even know I have any personal coins. However, I do have two friends that know what I have and where they are stored too assist my family in getting them sold.
    And these are people I trust that I have known for years and would not screw my family over, both have more money than they can dispose of now.

    I have sold a few off this past year, more of a trimmin, and cleaning up the collection, but I plan to maintain several until late in life, because I enjoy owning them.

  • RaufusRaufus Posts: 6,984 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Excellent topic.

    Hopefully one or both of my kids will love the hobby and want to keep the collection.

    Barring that, my estate plans list a specific dealer who is to be trusted to sell off the collection. This has been discussed with my wife and the dealer.

    I have a similar plan for my firearms.

    I cringe when I see widows who just get robbed. The dealers who do this are scum IMHO. Still, one must think about this and have a plan or one's collection will be sold for pennies on the dollar.
    Land of the Free because of the Brave!
  • DBSTrader2DBSTrader2 Posts: 3,498 ✭✭✭✭
    Nobody's getting rich off my collection!

    I started filling holes in Whitman folders as a kid from circulation, and continue to this day.

    For me, it's the thrill of filling a hole now and then, and keeping current.

    Once I pass, I hope my kids will keep & maintain the collection to someday pass on to their kids to do the same. It will just be a little "piece of me" & my interests for them to remember me by & enjoy.

    Like I said, nobody's getting rich off it, but they represent coins from bygone days that just aren't made anymore and can't be replaced out of circulating coins anymore.... IHC's, 2-cent pieces, Buffalo's, Mercury's, Walkers/Franklins, Morgans/Peace.... all beautiful coins for my kids and their kids, etc to enjoy for years to come, I hope.
  • curlycurly Posts: 2,880
    I have two daughters who could care less about coins, which means they will sell to a local b+m for whatever they are offered. A few years ago I began selling off and buying real estate. I am not completely sold out yet but I sure do sleep better at night. The rent checks are nice too.
    Every man is a self made man.

Leave a Comment

BoldItalicStrikethroughOrdered listUnordered list
Emoji
Image
Align leftAlign centerAlign rightToggle HTML viewToggle full pageToggle lights
Drop image/file