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I recently got back from Japan and I came back with a lot of yen coins, at the time before returning I did not know that it was not possible to exchange yen coins to notes. So I am now stuck with £52 in yen coins. The £52 is made up of a tiny amount of 50 yens loads of 100 yens and a few 500 yens.
Basically what I'm asking is: does anybody want to take these off my hands. I will be offering a reduced exchange rate to give insentive to sell them.
I prefer if you live in the UK but I will happily talk about sending to europe.
Oh and I can get photo proof if required.
Edited: 2010-03-01, 5:40 pm
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Why did you collect a sack of coins in the first place? It seems kind of bizarre.
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In my year and 8 months in Japan I've collected quite the pile of 1, 5, and 10 yen coins.
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It was more like I didnt notice I was collecting it. I normally ended up putting change in a a bag back at the house i was staying at and carry notes with me.. sorta ended up piling up. Don't worry I know it was a stupid thing to do.
*edit* dont even get me started on the 1, 5 and 10s.
Edited: 2010-03-01, 6:35 pm
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I dunno. I don't really like carrying things in my pockets. I really ought to go down to the banco soon though to cash in.
Edited: 2010-03-01, 7:23 pm
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I collected all my 1/5/10 yen coins in a sack over my 15 months in Japan and then just took then to the post office bank a couple days before I left. They put it straight into my account without a fee.
52 pounds worth of coins! That's like 23 kilograms! That must have taken up a whole suitcase! (har har)
Tax is included in the listed price so it is really easy to have exact change ready. In Japan, if the bill comes to 467 yen and I hand them 517 yen, whether they are much smarter than American cashiers or told never to question the customer, they don't bat an eye and give me my 50yen coin back.
In the US, if a bill comes to $4.67 and I hand the cashier $5.17, half the time she will push the change back and tell me I made a mistake.
It is scary how much easier it is to spend a 500 yen coin compared to a $5 bill :/
Two quarters are much easier to carry around than 50 cents in pennies, nickles and dimes!
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True, but it annoys cashiers when you treat them like an exchange service, which is why they give the look or ignore the extra money (they do it in Japan too).
-former cashier
Edited: 2010-03-02, 7:02 am
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Just want to add that the full £52 I will sell for around £40 which is a massive discount to give incentive to take it off my hands!
You can buy smaller amounts ofcourse.
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Does that include free shipping (to Japan)?
In America, making a cashier put down her cell phone (if they do at all) to ring you up annoys them. So yea, I can see where forcing them to divide change into the individual slots of their drawer would cause them mental anguish.
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I've heard people complain about that but I've never had that experience. I often give change to cashiers to make it equal quarters, and I never get any bad reactions from that.
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I would take it as I am going to Japan next month but I don't know if its worth the trouble to send it to Germany.
Besides that, isn't it heavy? Actually I have no clue but carrying a lot of extra weight to Japan doesn't seem like a good idea to me.
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It weighs 200grams. I cant belive how much it costs to send to germany.. £20. I dont exactly want to send it via normal post as its common for people to just steal it.
Guess I am going to have to go back to begging banks.
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In the UK I've never had a problem paying the exact amount. And if for example I try to buy £9.01 worth of stuff with a £10 note, some cashiers will even ask if I have the 1p. Other cashiers though seem bewildered if I try to do things like the latter- it's not that they don't want to cooperate, they just don't understand what I'm trying to do. Anyway, I do still end up with 1p, 2p and 5p coins coming in faster than I spend them...
Edited: 2010-03-02, 2:47 pm