LOL  Peter does have a point though.  My personal view is that while there are a number of reasons for having a coin slabbed (protection, grading, 'saleability' reassurance and to have it added to a 'hall of fame' type ranking), the majority can be satisfied without using a TPGS. Capsules will protect your coins.  And as Peter hints, self-education and forums like this will help establish a grade for coin as well as helping you identify the modern copies.  A slab is no substitute of learning. The sales aspect has already been mentioned.  A while back (and probably buried in one of the threads I linked to earlier) there was a proposal a number of members here join together to buy high grade British coins, have them slabbed and sell them via an auction house like Heritage.  The reason being the observation that PCGS slabbed British coins often go for a premium in the US over what they would here.  Now there are a number of reasons this may be true and slabbing is only part of it.  Bottom line is, only one person can decide whether they think it's worthwhile having their coins slabbed and that's you. Some very interesting points there. It's only recently that I've taken an interest in collecting more seriously than my earlier attempts. I'f I'm honest I'm still trying to decide what areas I'd like to start serious collections in. The choice is immense and the learning curve very steep. Normally I'm the impatient sort but am trying very hard to restrain myself until I'm sure I know what I want to learn about and collect. I'd like to build a collection to hand over to my young son when the time comes and hope he'll share my interest as he grows. I confess, I'm also an investor and entrepeneur in other areas and this does rightly or wrongly make me look at potential purchases in different ways. From what I can gather, I really should look at raw initially as this will assist with being able to grade myself. I can see the obvious flaws with slabbed coins that have been mentioned and I also understand the difference in mentalities between the US and UK, I've certainly spent enough time stateside to understand how many yanks think differently from the brits, so their attitudes to slabbing don't really come as any surprise to me. So Azda, you really don't come across as racist to me, and I doubt anyone else. Life would be pretty boring if we all had the same mentality after all! My initial interest was sparked by seeing several slabbed UK bullion coins selling for an apparent premium to the american market. This made me wonder if there was any mileage in buying, slabbing and selling with the slab 'adding more value than it's initial cost' to overseas markets. This isn't the collector in me talking, but the entrepeneur. However, if it were that easy I'm sure a lot more people would be doing it right now! This also made me wonder if the likes of London Coins purchase bullion coins in volume and then examine them and simply slab the best examples to add a premium to their stock? What does everybody else think? So I think I'll probably look to acquire some similar raw coins and see how I do at grading them, and then purchase a slabbed version to see if I can see the comparrison myself. I'm under no illusion that there is an awful lot to learn here.