9.8 Percent
If I have $150 in coins what will coin star charge me
It would depend on what the amount you were being charged in the first place was. You would be paying 18c in a tip for each dollar of the original charge.
if you have a dollar it costs 42, then your quarter dollar costs 21. Its just half the dollar
One dollar
if you have a dollar it costs 42, then your quarter dollar costs 21. Its just half the dollar
If I have $150 in coins what will coin star charge me
9.8%
One dollar. Of course. If it is current legal tender, they can't charge more than face value.
Technically they should accept all forms of small dollar coins - Anthony, Sacagawea, and presidential - because they have the same size, weight, and electronic "signature". However some machines may not be set to accept any dollar coins so you'd have to check around.That said, there are much less costly ways to convert coins to paper money. Unless you request the money as a gift card, most Coinstar machines charge a so-called service fee that amounts to about 9 cents out of every dollar counted. That means you'll lose nearly one-tenth of everything you put in. Check with some major banks to see if they'll count them for free. If you live in the northeast US there is a large super-regional bank with a 2-letter name and green logo that will count coins without charge, whether you have an account with them or not.
$10 dollar.
It depends on the change in it. Go to a coinstar in walmart
I believe they charge you one dollar for every single bid.
Sorry, but it is not possible to answer your question. If you are asking about a sales tax, that is different in different places. In one state it may be 2 cents for every dollar, in some states 8 cents for every dollar- and the percentage can be different for different things you buy. Unless you tell us the city, state and nation where you are located, we do not have enough information to answer.
depends on how much you had, if it was under an ounce then you will most likely get a misdemeanor charge and somewhere around a 100 dollar fine.
Are u stupid u can't buy a coin star machine only if u were rich$$$$
take it to coinstar and get coin count and multiply each respective coin to its mint weight and voila
not so much percentage, more along of how much it means to you to get rid of or get that certain thing. Also how much you can afford, value of the item (sentimental or cash) also plays a part obviously.