US Notes

Paper Quality in Currency Grading: Crispness, Body, and What ‘Original Paper’ Really Means

Paper quality is the single most debated and least understood element of currency grading, capable of lifting a note two full grade points or sinking an otherwise attractive piece to problem status. This guide breaks down crispness, body, and the elusive concept of original paper so collectors at every level can grade with confidence.

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What Makes a Note Multiply-Qualified as EPQ: Why Not Every Uncirculated Submission Earns the Paper Quality Designation

EPQ, or Exceptional Paper Quality, is one of the most misunderstood designations in currency grading, and its presence or absence on a certified holder can swing a note’s value by hundreds of dollars. This deep-dive explains exactly what PCGS Currency and PMG evaluate when awarding the EPQ qualifier, why pristine uncirculated notes still fail to earn it, and how collectors can identify EPQ-worthy material before submitting.

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The CVF 35 EPQ Designation for National Bank Notes: How Original Paper Quality Rewrites the Market Value Equation

A Choice Very Fine 35 EPQ National Bank Note can command dramatically different prices than its non-EPQ counterpart, yet many collectors still underestimate what that three-letter suffix actually means. This deep-dive explores how paper quality grading works for National Bank Notes, which series benefit most from EPQ designation, and how to spot original surfaces before you spend serious money.

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