
fluke
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sort them out and take to bank. |
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jason_puma
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Roll them up and take them to the bank to get the bills.
Most banks will provide free paper rolls for you to roll your change up. |
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cleocat
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UK
Put them in money bags in correct denominations and take them to a bank. |
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firebobby
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Fill bank bags with the correct amount and ask your local traders if they need them. My local newsagent is always glad to accept mine. |
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Charlene
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If in UK go to Asda or Sainsburys and put them in a Coinstar machine. They take 7p per pound but it is a lot less hassle! Then you get a receipt to redeem against your shopping or can get the cash at the customer services desk. |
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Deliah
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Simply take them to YOUR bank and they will toss them in a counting sorting machine. You do not even have to sort or roll the coins. |
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Tericka
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You could roll the coins yourself and take them to the bank. However, Coinstar will give gift certificates instead of cash and not charge a fee. |
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shirley v
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change them at the bank |
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joshuswa
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go to your local post office!:D |
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FlirtyBri
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Put it all in one of those green machines ......... what's it called.........Counstar or somethin like that!!! |
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cairn4lodge
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if you bag them up and have a bank account, take them to local branch and you should not be charged anything. banks do charge if you don't bank with them. |
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John Reid
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Don't use those rip-off machines in stores. They charge 15%.
Take the coins to a bank. You may have to start a savings account if you don't already have one. |
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bunny_2015
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Well they have those coinstar things. U put the money in but u have to pay for every i forgot but yeah or u could go to the bank and they would give u cash it might be embarssing though coming in the bank with a whole bucket of coins |
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♥Shelbys Dad says no more♥
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go to your public coin star...oR IDK??? |
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hamster321
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Use a coinstar |
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krazy_teknos
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The inexpensive way:
Like someone already said: the best thing to do is sort them and take them to the bank. Some banks give you the numbered coin wraps free or you can buy them at any retail store such as Kmart, Walmart, Office Max...
The slightly expensive way:
If you don't want to sort them by hand, buy an automatic coin sorter which is aroudn $20 or something.
You can go to a nearby coinstar machine or similar which charges you around 8.9 cents per dollar. With this machine you just drop the coins and it will count them for you. Some banks also have similar machines and waive the fees if you are their customer |
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Boots McGraw
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If you have a Capital One bank in your area, and open up an account with them, they will let you use their change collecting machines at no charge. Otherwise, they charge 9.9% to convert your coins into cash. |
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Daniel C
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That's some pretty poor english there.
Seems like you have a bunch of coins and want to turn them in for paper money without paying any surcharge. The only way to do that is to get some coin rolls from the bank and do them up yourself.
And don't try to shortchange the rolls; the weight of a full roll is a known quantity and the bank will check it before giving you the cash. |
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