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World Coin Grading Standards & References

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US Coin Shows

November 26, 2025

Grading World Coins: Not Always the Sheldon Scale

While American collectors are accustomed to the Sheldon 70-point grading scale used by PCGS and NGC, the world coin market historically used — and in many regions still uses — different grading systems. Understanding these variations is essential for buying world coins from international sources, reading European auction catalogs, and accurately evaluating coins graded under different standards.

The good news is that PCGS and NGC have become increasingly dominant in world coin grading, creating a common language that facilitates international trading. However, knowing the traditional systems helps you interpret older references, European dealer descriptions, and non-US auction lots.

Traditional European Grading Systems

Most European countries historically used descriptive adjective grades rather than numerical scales. The approximate equivalences:

  • Schön/Schoen (German) = Good (G-4 to G-6): Heavily worn but major design elements visible
  • Sehr Schön/SS (German) = Very Fine (VF-20 to VF-35): Moderate wear with clear details
  • Vorzüglich/VZ (German) = Extremely Fine (EF-40 to EF-45): Light wear on highest points only
  • Stempelglanz/STGL (German) = Mint State (MS-60+): No wear, as struck
  • Polierte Platte/PP (German) = Proof (PF): Proof finish

French equivalences follow similar lines: TB (Très Bien) = VF, SUP (Superbe) = EF/AU, FDC (Fleur de Coin) = MS. British dealers traditionally use Fair, Fine, VF, EF, UNC, and FDC (Fleur de Coin for gem uncirculated).

Important caveat: European grading has traditionally been more conservative than American grading. A coin described as "EF" by a European dealer might correspond to AU-50 or even AU-55 on the Sheldon scale. A European "UNC" often corresponds to MS-62 to MS-63 by American standards. This discrepancy means that coins purchased from European dealers using traditional grades can sometimes represent better value than the grade description suggests.

NGC and PCGS World Coin Grading

Both major US grading services offer world coin certification:

NGC World Coins:

  • Uses the standard Sheldon 70-point scale
  • Maintains the NGC World Coin Census — population data for all graded world coins
  • Offers NGC Details grades for coins with problems (cleaned, scratched, environmental damage) — the coin receives a grade equivalent but with a "Details" qualifier
  • Strong market acceptance for world coins globally

PCGS World Coins:

  • Also uses the Sheldon scale
  • Offers PCGS Genuine designation for authentic coins that don't qualify for a numerical grade
  • Growing world coin grading volume but smaller world coin population than NGC

For most world coins valued above $100, third-party grading by NGC or PCGS provides several benefits: authentication (particularly important for scarce types vulnerable to counterfeiting), standardized grading (enabling confident buying and selling across borders), and holder protection (physical preservation in inert plastic).

When to Grade World Coins

Not every world coin benefits from certification. Consider grading when:

  • Value exceeds $200–$300: The grading fee ($20–$50+) is proportional to the coin's value
  • Authenticity is uncertain: Certification provides expert authentication that protects your investment
  • You plan to sell: Certified coins are easier to sell at full market value, especially to US buyers accustomed to slabbed coins
  • The coin is a key date or rarity: Proper grading establishes the coin's place in population reports and provides market credibility
  • Insurance purposes: Certified coins with established grades are easier to insure and claim on

Coins that generally don't need certification: common world coins under $50, modern bullion traded primarily for metal content, and coins you're keeping in a personal collection with no plans to sell.

Special Grading Challenges for World Coins

World coins present unique grading challenges that don't apply to US coins:

  • Weak strikes: Many historical world coins (particularly from developing nations and colonial mints) were struck on primitive equipment, resulting in coins that appear lower-grade than they actually are due to incomplete striking rather than wear.
  • Non-standard planchets: Historical coins from various nations used irregular planchets, making centering and edge quality inconsistent.
  • Different wear patterns: Coins from different cultures were handled and stored differently, creating wear patterns unfamiliar to evaluators trained on US coins.
  • Toning preferences: What's considered attractive toning varies by culture — dark toning on British coins is often preferred, while American collectors generally favor lighter toning.
  • Cleaning standards: Historical cleaning practices varied by country. Some European coins were routinely cleaned in ways that would be considered damage by US standards but were accepted practice in their home market.

Essential References for World Coin Collectors

Building a reference library accelerates your ability to grade and value world coins:

  • Krause "Standard Catalog of World Coins": The master reference, published in date-range volumes. Essential for identification and baseline pricing. Our Krause guide covers these volumes in detail.
  • Country-specific catalogs: Spink (British), Charlton (Canadian), KM (various countries) provide deeper coverage than Krause for specific nations.
  • NGC World Coin Census: Free online population data for all NGC-graded world coins — invaluable for assessing rarity in specific grades.
  • Numista.com: Free online catalog with community-contributed pricing data for most world coin types.

When buying world coins at coin shows, don't hesitate to ask dealers about the grading standard they're using. A dealer describing a coin as "EF" using European standards may be offering a coin that would grade AU-55 by PCGS standards — understanding this distinction can help you find value that other buyers miss.

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 1, 2025 by the US Coin Shows editorial team. Editorial policy

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