Family & Relationships2 mins ago
How much are you charged for changing up small change in coin changing machines?
16 Answers
Can anyone tell me how much it costs to change up loose change in ones of those coin changing machines you find in some supermarkets.
I assume you pay so much for every pound changed.
I cant be arsed bagging up and waiting in a bank to change it up as its only a relatively small amount.
Any ideas anyone? - Thanks!!
I assume you pay so much for every pound changed.
I cant be arsed bagging up and waiting in a bank to change it up as its only a relatively small amount.
Any ideas anyone? - Thanks!!
Answers
Their website says 8.9%
If you are with the right bank and use the right branch you can pay it into your account for nothing if they have a coin machine - no sorting needed
If you are with the right bank and use the right branch you can pay it into your account for nothing if they have a coin machine - no sorting needed
20:55 Tue 09th Aug 2011
@albaqwerty
1p weighs 3.56g
2p weighs 7.12g (i.e. twice 1p)
Dividing weight in grams of any amount of (mixed) copper coins by 3.56 gives the total value in pence.
5p weighs 3.25g
10p weighs 6.5g (i.e. twice 5p)
Dividing weight in grams of any amount of (mixed) 5p an 10p coins by 0.65 gives the total value in pence.
Other denominations need to weighed separately...
20p = 5g
50p = 8g
£1 = 9.5g
1p weighs 3.56g
2p weighs 7.12g (i.e. twice 1p)
Dividing weight in grams of any amount of (mixed) copper coins by 3.56 gives the total value in pence.
5p weighs 3.25g
10p weighs 6.5g (i.e. twice 5p)
Dividing weight in grams of any amount of (mixed) 5p an 10p coins by 0.65 gives the total value in pence.
Other denominations need to weighed separately...
20p = 5g
50p = 8g
£1 = 9.5g
There is actually a limit as to how much change someone has to legally accept, so if you want to hand over more than 20p worth of copper or £5 of silver coins at a till (or on a bus etc etc) then they are under no obligation to accept it.
It does make me laugh though when someone like Barney is willing to lose 50p out of £5 to save himself a bit of trouble. What happened to the old adage "look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves"?
It does make me laugh though when someone like Barney is willing to lose 50p out of £5 to save himself a bit of trouble. What happened to the old adage "look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves"?
@spudqueen - "legal tender" does not apply to ordinary transactions so someone on a till or a bus is under no obligation to accept any quantity of coins.
The strict meaning of legal tender is such that a debtor cannot be sued for non payment if that payment is made to a court in legal tender. The legal tender limit for 20p and 50p coins is £10.
The strict meaning of legal tender is such that a debtor cannot be sued for non payment if that payment is made to a court in legal tender. The legal tender limit for 20p and 50p coins is £10.
"I cant be arsed bagging up and waiting in a bank to change it up as its only a relatively small amount" ..... dear oh dear, how sad!
If it was a big bottle of change and the interest rate meant i would be losing £10 + for the priveledge of changing it up then yes i would bag it up... we are talking 50p or slightly more. the cost of the petrol alone to my bank would be more plus i cant make it there during opening hours due to work...Asdas is a 2 min drive. For the sake of 50p its worth it to 'me' maybe not to you. I would probably do this once or twice a year so its not going to cast me into poverty.
If it was a big bottle of change and the interest rate meant i would be losing £10 + for the priveledge of changing it up then yes i would bag it up... we are talking 50p or slightly more. the cost of the petrol alone to my bank would be more plus i cant make it there during opening hours due to work...Asdas is a 2 min drive. For the sake of 50p its worth it to 'me' maybe not to you. I would probably do this once or twice a year so its not going to cast me into poverty.
Error yes they advertise. If you press the start button it will tell you the rate they deduct and give you the option of cancelling the transaction if your not happy. 7% is the normal for coinstar machines found in asda stores. If you take the ticket to customer service desk they will give you the cash equivalent. You don't have to spend it on shopping
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