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Finance

These Old Coins and Banknotes Are Selling For More Than Real Estate

Last updated: July 26, 2025 3:14 pm
Oliver James
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4 Min Read
These Old Coins and Banknotes Are Selling For More Than Real Estate
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Some old coins and banknotes are selling for more than the cost of a home. These collectibles are drawing six-figure bids from buyers, pushing them into the same conversation as traditional investments like real estate.

Contents
Kuang-Hsü Tael (1906)Long-Whiskered Dragon Dollars (1911)Netherlands Bank 100 Gulden Note (1814-1838)Why Collectibles Are Beating Property

The right item, authenticated and auctioned, can deliver an outsized return, all without the maintenance, taxes or paperwork that come with owning property.

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Kuang-Hsü Tael (1906)

In June 2025, a rare Chinese silver coin called the Kuang-hsü Tael from the Peh Family Collection sold for $810,000 at a Heritage Auctions event, according to CoinWeek. It’s a coin few people have ever held in person, but collectors were willing to pay more than the average home price in cities like Austin ($523,769), Denver ($555,304) and Salt Lake City ($571,623).

More Collectibles: 7 McDonald’s Toys Worth Way More Today

Long-Whiskered Dragon Dollars (1911)

The Peh Family Collection also produced two highly sought-after 1911 “Long-Whiskered Dragon” silver dollars that set auction records. A “Restrike Specimen Pattern Long-Whiskered Dragon Dollar Year 3” (1911) graded SP63 by NGC sold for $504,000, while a nearly identical piece, graded SP63+, went for $408,000 — both fetching more than the average home price in Tucson ($331,789) or Jacksonville ($290,108).

Netherlands Bank 100 Gulden Note (1814-1838)

At the same auction, a Dutch banknote fetched $114,000. It wasn’t gold, and it wasn’t flashy, but it was rare and in great condition. For perspective, that single piece of paper sold for more than the average home in Detroit ($78,601).

Why Collectibles Are Beating Property

A decent home in a mid-sized city might take 90 days or more to sell. The seller covers taxes, agent commissions, repairs and closing costs. And unless it’s in a booming market, the return often creeps up slowly, if at all.

Compare that to the collectibles market. A coin can be shipped to an auction house, authenticated and sold to a global bidder base in days. No yard signs or home inspections, and a rare item in pristine condition can get instant interest and a fast sale.

And while real estate is often limited by location, collectibles aren’t. A coin stored in a desk drawer in New Jersey can sell to a buyer in Tokyo or Dubai without ever changing hands physically. That kind of mobility and liquidity makes coins and notes increasingly attractive, especially when markets are uncertain.

Editor’s note: Average home prices were sourced from Zillow.com.

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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: These Old Coins and Banknotes Are Selling For More Than Real Estate

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