⭐ IRS Coin
IRS Coin Appraisal in the Bay Area
Accurate, written coin valuations for federal estate tax filings and Form 706 reporting.
- ANA Member
- PCGS Authorized Submitter
- NGC Authorized Submitter
- 14+ Years Serving the Bay Area
IRS Coin
What an IRS Coin Appraisal Is
When a coin collection is involved in an estate, a charitable donation, or an inheritance, the IRS requires a written appraisal prepared by a qualified appraiser. A verbal estimate or dealer quote does not meet that standard.
The appraisal must document the fair market value of each coin, identify the methodology used, and include the appraiser’s credentials. Without that documentation, the IRS can challenge reported values, reject deductions, or trigger penalties.
Who Needs IRS
Who Needs an IRS Coin Appraisal
01
Estates Filing Form 706
When an estate includes a coin collection valued above $3,000, a qualified appraisal must be attached to Form 706 to establish fair market value as of the date of death. The appraisal is required even if the estate does not owe federal estate tax.
02
Heirs Establishing Stepped-Up Basis
When coins are inherited, the cost basis resets to fair market value on the date of death under IRC Section 1014(a). Without an appraisal to support the value, the IRS may challenge the reported tax basis. A documented written appraisal protects heirs from that risk.
03
Donors Filing Form 8283
When coins or a numismatic collection valued at $5,000 or more are donated to a qualifying organization, the IRS requires a qualified appraisal to substantiate the deduction on Form 8283, Section B. The appraisal must be completed before the tax return is filed.
Qualified Appraisal
What the IRS Requires in a Qualified Appraisal
The IRS does not accept all appraisals equally. A qualified appraisal must include:
- A description of each coin including type, date, mint mark, and condition
- The fair market value of each item based on open market comparables, not retail price guides
- The valuation date
- The appraiser's qualifications and credentials
- A signed declaration that the appraiser has no prohibited interest in the coins being valued
The IRS defines fair market value as the price a willing buyer and seller would agree upon with reasonable knowledge of the facts, which means open-market auction comparables are used rather than retail or guidebook prices. Liberty Coins
Report Covers
What the Appraisal Report Covers
Mountain View US and Foreign Coins provides written reports that meet IRS documentation standards. Each report documents every coin individually, covering coin type, date, mint mark, grade and condition, fair market value based on verified market data, and appraiser credentials and methodology.
The report is accepted by estate attorneys, CPAs, probate courts, and the IRS. You keep the written report regardless of what you decide to do with the collection.
Inherited Coins
Other Appraisal Services for Inherited Coins
If you are managing an estate or inherited collection, you may also need:
Not sure which appraisal type you need?
Area's We Serve
Serving the Bay Area
IRS coin appraisals are available across Mountain View.
Text photos to get a fast initial response before scheduling a full appraisal.
Get the Appraisal Started
IRS appraisal deadlines are tied to estate filing dates. Contact Mountain View US and Foreign Coins to start the process.