Safe Keeping: Bank vs Home

Hopefully the formatting has been fixed on this forum since the last time I posted. If this message is displayed in a huge one-paragraph block, it obviously did not post how I intended. Anyway, this is a summary of the pros and cons of keeping your personal coin collection in a bank safety deposit box versus home and vise-versa. Opinions and feedback are welcome.
Bank safety deposit box - Pros
* most secure way to store a collection
* protection against fire or flood at home
* secure even in case of home robbery
* a must-have if you do not have an expensive home safe
Bank safety deposit box - Cons
* horrible bank customer service, often denied access due to insufficient staff and long wait times
* $100 a year
* 9:00 to 5:00 Monday through Friday, 9:00 to Noon Saturday
* poor lighting for viewing
* inconvenient and time consuming
* not humidity controlled
Home safe - Pros
* convenient, no need to rely on Banking hours or lack of customer service
* never denied access to your collection
* perfect light for home viewing
* paid for one time and one time only, no re-occurring fees
* humidity controlled
Home safe - Cons
* quality home safe is expensive
* subject to home invasion, fire, or flood
* home safe typically does not add to home's value or liquidity
* subject to 'stick up' home burglary if home at time of invasion
Am I missing anything?
Bank safety deposit box - Pros
* most secure way to store a collection
* protection against fire or flood at home
* secure even in case of home robbery
* a must-have if you do not have an expensive home safe
Bank safety deposit box - Cons
* horrible bank customer service, often denied access due to insufficient staff and long wait times
* $100 a year
* 9:00 to 5:00 Monday through Friday, 9:00 to Noon Saturday
* poor lighting for viewing
* inconvenient and time consuming
* not humidity controlled
Home safe - Pros
* convenient, no need to rely on Banking hours or lack of customer service
* never denied access to your collection
* perfect light for home viewing
* paid for one time and one time only, no re-occurring fees
* humidity controlled
Home safe - Cons
* quality home safe is expensive
* subject to home invasion, fire, or flood
* home safe typically does not add to home's value or liquidity
* subject to 'stick up' home burglary if home at time of invasion
Am I missing anything?
0
Comments
* I have superb customer service at my local bank with every bank employee being friendly and prompt
* the large boxes are only about one-half the $100 rental fee listed in the first post
* very convenient location
* Intercept Shield boxes and Ziplock bags provide very good moisture control
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Jim
The floods recently here in West Virginia took out one bank. All of the safe deposit box holders had to schedule appointments to open their box.
Once a felon knows you have a safe in your house, they just come back the next time with a gun.
-Not big enough. I have two safe-deposit boxes one is 5x10 and the other 10x10. They are full. One cost $50 and the other $100 per year. If you collect coins in slabs or albums they fill up fast. Modern proof sets and some mint products if kept in original packing will fill these up fast also.
SDB all the way.
Member ANA, SPMC, SCNA, FUN, CONECA
As a gun owner I understand some of the bravado of members who keep their coins in a safe at home. And if I were home during a home invasion I am confident that I would hold my own in that situation. Yeah, Make My Day! What I would fear is my wife being home alone with some meth-head pointing a gun at her head while yelling open that f'ing safe or I will blow your brains out.
Joseph J. Singleton - First Superintendent of the U.S. Branch Mint in Dahlonega Georgia
Findley Ridge Collection
About Findley Ridge
What I would fear is my wife being home alone with some meth-head pointing a gun at her head while yelling open that f'ing safe or I will blow your brains out.
At my house that goes into the Pro column.
you must have a very low cost coin rider??
in Canada it is CAN $ .60 per $ 100 declared value. If, bif IF they will insure it.
My coins are stored in 3 different locations. Only the currently "active" coins are at home in a well hidden safe. I would dare any of you to find it within 10 minutes. that is the max response time before the law will show up in response to a well hidden silent alarm.
should a culprit find the safe by sheer luck, he will find himself with a serious problem. If the right"thingy" is triggered, he will be engulfed in very thick "smoke" and will not be able to see anything. not even 5 inches in front of his eyes.
Oh referring to OP: most reasonably priced home safes are "fire safe to some max temperature" and protect the contents. some even with a guarantee.
BSDBoxes?? are they fire protected? and are they burglar proof when a culprit decides to come through the roof as many banks move into existing premises in shopping centres? I believe in this case the internal alarm system is the only protection???
Menomonee Falls Wisconsin USA
http://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistr...dset.aspx?s=68269&ac=1">Musky 1861 Mint Set
Government will take over/close banks and seize assets some day...that's got to be a potential "con"
If it comes to that, the coin collection will probably not be worth much anyway.
Menomonee Falls Wisconsin USA
http://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistr...dset.aspx?s=68269&ac=1">Musky 1861 Mint Set
I don't believe that most here would factor this into their decisions, nor do most consider this a realistic threat.
Here in lower NY state 10x10 boxes are very hard to find and cost around $250 each. Some banks have no crowds and have good customer service but no boxes. Other banks are crowded and I won't do business there. Finding all is difficult and you will pay for it.
I store all my coins in a glass cookie jar on top of the fridge.
The kids are never going to reach that !!
When I go on vacation I take all my expensive coins out of my safe and hide in more than a dozen places around
the house/garage. Then I put all my pennies/and stuff that is normally outside the safe into the safe. Can't find
a way to hide it all so just make it a time consuming search for the thieves. Let the neighbors know and hope it
doesn't burn to the ground....
bob
What I would fear is my wife being home alone with some meth-head pointing a gun at her head while yelling open that f'ing safe or I will blow your brains out.
At my house that goes into the Pro column.
This is an extremely poor attempt at humor?!?
Successful BST xactions w/PCcoins, Drunner, Manofcoins, Rampage, docg, Poppee, RobKool, and MichealDixon.
Government will take over/close banks and seize assets some day...that's got to be a potential "con"
In the highly unlikely event that a bank is closed, the FDIC seizes BANK ASSETS, not SDB contents....
Successful BST xactions w/PCcoins, Drunner, Manofcoins, Rampage, docg, Poppee, RobKool, and MichealDixon.
My question would be, for those who keep coins in both places, what is the cutoff for the SDB. For me it between $100 and $200 and up. I enjoy being able to look at some of my less expensive coins, i.e. modern type set without going to the SDB.
Heavy safe at home. Gun close by.
Gun.....IN safe also.