Free Resources and Apps for Learning to Grade
March 9, 2026
Building Your Grading Toolkit
Learning to grade coins accurately takes practice — but the resources available today make it easier than ever. Here are the best free and affordable tools to accelerate your grading education.
Free Online Resources
PCGS CoinFacts
PCGS CoinFacts is the most comprehensive online reference for US coins. For each coin type and date, you'll find:
- High-resolution photos at multiple grade levels
- PCGS Price Guide values
- Population reports (how many graded at each level)
- Auction price history
- Variety attributions
CoinFacts is free to browse. Some features require a PCGS membership.
NGC Coin Explorer
NGC Coin Explorer provides similar resources for NGC-graded coins: photos, price guides, census data, and variety information. NGC's photo library is extensive and completely free.
PCGS Photograde Online
PCGS Photograde shows representative photographs of coins at every major grade level for most US series. This is the online version of the classic Photograde book and is completely free. Essential for visual calibration.
Mobile Apps
- PCGS CoinFacts app (iOS/Android) — Free. Coin identification, price guides, and photograde images in your pocket. Useful at coin shows for quick reference.
- NGC app (iOS/Android) — Free. Cert verification, price guide, census data, and NFC chip scanning for modern holders.
- PCGS Photograde app (iOS) — Free. The photograde reference optimized for mobile use.
- Coin Identifier apps — Various AI-powered apps that can photograph a coin and suggest a type and approximate grade. Useful as a starting point but not a substitute for human evaluation.
Essential Books
- Official ANA Grading Standards for United States Coins — The authoritative grading reference. Line drawings and descriptions for every grade of every US coin type. Updated regularly.
- Photograde by James F. Ruddy — The classic photographic grading guide. Side-by-side photos make it easy to compare your coins to known grades.
- Making the Grade by Adna Wilde & James Halperin — Focuses on the thought process behind grading decisions. Excellent for intermediate collectors.
- Grading Coins by Photographs by Q. David Bowers — A comprehensive guide with extensive photography. Especially strong on toning and surface analysis.
Online Communities
- CoinTalk.com — Active forum with a dedicated grading section. Post photos and get grading opinions from experienced collectors.
- Reddit r/coins and r/CoinGrading — Active communities for grading discussions and "guess the grade" posts.
- Collectors Universe forums (PCGS) — The official PCGS forum with extensive grading discussions and expert participation.
- NGC Chat Boards — NGC's community forum with grading discussions and variety identification help.
Practice Methods
- Blind grading — Cover slab labels and grade coins yourself before revealing. Track your accuracy in a spreadsheet.
- Auction review — Before an auction closes, grade the lots from photos, then compare your grades to the final certified grades and realized prices.
- Coin show practice — At coin shows, ask dealers if you can examine their inventory. Many dealers enjoy teaching and will walk you through grading differences.
- Local coin club events — Many coin clubs hold grading workshops and "bring your coins" meetings where members practice together.
Physical Tools
- 10x loupe — A Hastings triplet or comparable quality loupe ($15–$40). Essential for close examination.
- Desk lamp — Single-point LED light, adjustable angle. $20–$50.
- Digital scale — Accurate to 0.01g for weight verification. $15–$25.
- Calipers — Digital calipers for diameter measurement. $10–$20.
Series Conclusion
Over 12 articles, you've learned the complete fundamentals of coin grading — from the Sheldon scale to PCGS vs NGC, from circulated grades to Mint State, from proofs to eye appeal, and from submission to verification. Grading is a skill that improves with practice, and the resources listed here will help you continue developing your eye.
Ready to put your knowledge into action? Find a coin show near you and start examining coins in person. Nothing beats hands-on experience with guidance from experienced dealers.
Explore our other educational series on the Learn page — from US Coin Types to Key Dates & Errors and Building a Collection.
This article is for educational guidance. Where official grading rules, dealer memberships, legal requirements, or tax obligations apply, consult the relevant primary authority.
Last reviewed December 15, 2025 by the US Coin Shows editorial team. Editorial policy
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