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Jardines Galleries · Specialist resource · The local SA service · Sheldon-compatible · Companion to the main Certification page

SANGS — the local grading service.

The South African Numismatic Grading Service is the local alternative to NGC and PCGS — established early 2000s, Sheldon-compatible, and built around the realities of SA collecting: lower cost, faster turnaround, no customs risk. This page is the SANGS-specific deep dive that sits alongside the three-service comparison. For when international submission isn't the right choice — and for understanding when it still is.

R100 – 300 — Per-coin grading —
2 – 4 weeks — Standard turnaround —
Sheldon 1 – 70 — Same scale as NGC/PCGS —
Early 2000s — Established —

Overview

SANGS — the South African Numismatic Grading Service — was established in the early 2000s to provide a local alternative to international grading services. It addresses the structural barriers South African collectors face when submitting abroad: high shipping costs, customs delays, currency exchange overhead, and long turnaround times. SANGS provides authentication, grading, and encapsulation specifically for South African coins, banknotes, and tokens.

The service uses the same 70-point Sheldon scale as NGC and PCGS, which means a SANGS grade speaks the same grading language as an international slab. Market acceptance is high within SA and more limited internationally — the key trade-off explored in the comparison matrix.

The local advantage

Four reasons a South African collector chooses SANGS over an international service. The first three — cost, speed, no customs — solve structural problems of cross-border submission. The fourth — SA expertise — solves an information problem: SANGS graders specialise in the local series.

— Benefit 01 · Structural —

Cost

  • R100 – 300 per coin — roughly $5 – 15
  • NGC/PCGS modern tier — $23 – 40 plus international shipping
  • No currency exchange overhead — fees quoted and paid in ZAR
  • Lower total cost for any SA submission below the high-value threshold
— Benefit 02 · Structural —

Speed

  • 2 – 4 weeks standard turnaround
  • NGC/PCGS standard tier — weeks to months
  • Faster service available on request
  • Critical for time-sensitive submissions — auctions, gifts, dealer turnover
— Benefit 03 · Structural —

No customs risk

  • Local shipping only — R50 – 150 return
  • No customs declarations · no border delays · no clearance fees
  • No insurance complication for crossing borders
  • The hidden cost of international submission is eliminated entirely
— Benefit 04 · Informational —

SA expertise

  • Local specialists — graders steeped in the SA series
  • Familiarity with Union, Republic, ZAR, and modern issues
  • Variety attribution informed by SA-specific reference material
  • Knowledge of local fakes and contemporary forgeries

The Sheldon framework

SANGS uses the Sheldon 1 – 70 scale with standard adjectival grades — Poor, Fair, About Good, Good, Very Good, Fine, Very Fine, Extremely Fine, About Uncirculated, Mint State. For bronze and copper, the standard BN / RB / RD colour designations apply. Problem coins are flagged with Cleaned, Polished, Rim Damage, Ex-Mount, and similar designations.

  • Sheldon 1 – 70identical numerical scale to NGC and PCGS, ensuring grade-language compatibility across services
  • Colour designations (bronze/copper)BN (Brown), RB (Red-Brown), RD (Red)
  • Problem-coin flags — Cleaned · Polished · Rim Damage · Ex-Mount · and others
  • Encapsulation — inert holder with grade, certification number, and label
— Cross-reference — Full grading descriptions and historic technique are on the Grading ZAR Coins page. SANGS uses the identical terminology — a Sheldon 45 means the same thing in a SANGS slab as in an NGC or PCGS one. The grade-language is universal.

Notable certifications

Two SANGS certifications illustrate the service's role in the SA market. The first — the 1902 Veldpond contemporary forgery — is a reference piece for counterfeit study. The second — the 1923 Half Penny series — anchors the early Union bronze in high grade.

— Cert 01 · Counterfeit reference —

1902 Veldpond forgery

The "High 'A' Forgery" — a contemporary forgery of the 1902 Veldpond, graded and slabbed by SANGS as a reference piece. Sold as Noble Numismatics Lot 4039.

The example matters: SANGS authenticates and labels known fakes rather than rejecting them, which makes the slab itself a study tool. See the Counterfeit Detection page for context.

— Cert 02 · Union anchor —

1923 Half Penny series

MS63 BN, MS64 BN, and MS65 BN examples graded by SANGS — the 1923 Half Penny in high Mint State with original brown surfaces.

Records traced via Randburg Coin (2016). The series illustrates SANGS coverage of early Union bronze at the upper end of the colour-designation scale — territory NGC and PCGS also cover, here with local turnaround.

The submission process

Five steps from selecting coins to receiving the encapsulated SANGS slab back. The path differs from international submission primarily in step three — most SANGS submissions move through the SA dealer network rather than direct mail to the service.

01

Prepare coins

Select submissions, handle by edges only, package securely. Never clean or polish before submission — problem-coin flags follow surface alteration.

02

Complete the submission form

Coin descriptions, denomination and date, requested service tier, declared value for insurance.

03

Submit via dealer or mail

In person at coin shows, via participating dealers — Randburg Coin, Southern African Coin Co., Cape Coin — or direct mail.

04

Wait

Standard 2 – 4 weeks; express service available. No customs delays, no international tracking complications.

05

Receive graded coins

Encapsulated in SANGS holders with grade, certification number, and label. Return shipping R50 – 150 within SA.

— Practical note — Most South African collectors don't submit directly to SANGS. Submissions move through the dealer network — established dealers consolidate submissions, handle the paperwork, and return slabbed coins to the collector. Lower friction, fewer mistakes. See SA dealer network below.

Fees

Approximate SANGS fee structure in ZAR. Per-coin grading varies by tier and submission volume; encapsulation is included; authentication-only is offered for collectors who need provenance verification without a grade.

— SANGS fees · ZAR — SANGS · ZAR-denominated
Basic grading (per coin)R100 – 300
Authentication onlyR50 – 150
Variety attributionR50 – 100
EncapsulationIncluded
Return shipping (SA)R50 – 150

SANGS vs NGC / PCGS

Five factors separate SANGS from the international services. Four favour SANGS for SA submissions; one favours NGC/PCGS for international resale. The choice ultimately reduces to where the coin is destined to sell.

— The decision matrix · Five factors · Two pathways — Comparison summary
Factor SANGS NGC / PCGS
Cost per coin R100 – 300 (~$5 – 15) $23 – 40 + shipping
Shipping Local · R50 – 150 International · $50 – 100
Turnaround 2 – 4 weeks 4 – 12 weeks
Customs risk None Possible delays
Market acceptance High in SA · Limited internationally Worldwide
The choice is not about quality — both follow the same Sheldon scale — but about destination. A SANGS slab sells faster and at full value within SA; an NGC or PCGS slab carries further at international auction. Match the slab to the market. — The destination-first rule for SA coin submissions

When to choose SANGS

The decision tracks three variablescoin value, intended market, time pressure. The ladder below covers the standard cases and flags the exceptions where the calculus reverses.

— Decision framework · Use case → service — SANGS or NGC / PCGS?
Under R5,000 SANGS ideal. International fees and shipping consume too much of the value — the local service is the rational choice.
R5,000 – R20,000 Either works. Choice depends on intended market — SA collectors fine with SANGS, international resale favours NGC/PCGS.
R20,000 – R50,000 NGC / PCGS recommended. International recognition adds meaningful liquidity and price confidence at this level.
Over R50,000 NGC / PCGS mandatory. Major international auctions require it; serious buyers expect it.
Speed-critical SANGS — 2 – 4 weeks vs months. Time-sensitive submissions (auctions, gifts, dealer turnover) favour the local service regardless of value.
Registry sets NGC / PCGSRegistry Sets require the relevant service's slab. SANGS slabs don't qualify for NGC or PCGS Registry submission.

The SA dealer network

SANGS submissions typically move through dealers rather than direct from collector to service. Established SA dealers consolidate submissions, handle the paperwork, and return slabbed coins to the collector. Lower friction, fewer mistakes. Coin shows offer a parallel path — submit in person, talk to the grader's representative, eliminate shipping entirely.

  • Randburg Coin — long-standing Johannesburg dealer, Union and Republic specialist; submission service well-established
  • Southern African Coin Co. — broad SA coverage, regular SANGS submission processing
  • Cape Coin — Cape Town dealer, full SA series coverage
  • Coin shows — submission in person at SA numismatic events; no shipping risk; direct grader contact possible

Direct public contact details for SANGS are not widely published; the dealer network is the standard route. Confirm participation and current pricing with the dealer before consigning.

Sources

— Reference works for this page —
  • Noble Numismatics. Lot 4039 — 1902 Veldpond contemporary forgery, SANGS-slabbed "High 'A' Forgery".
  • Randburg Coin (2016). SANGS-graded 1923 Half Penny records — MS63 BN, MS64 BN, MS65 BN.
  • Randburg Coin. "Coin Grading" — dealer reference page covering SANGS standards.
  • South African coin dealers — submission information. Participating dealer protocols for SANGS submissions.

Library cross-references

Revision history

22 Feb 2026 Initial build (v1 format)
11 May 2026 Converted to v3 editorial format — expanded structure, cross-references rewired
The South African Numismatic Library A division of Jardines Galleries · © 2026