I have been collecting coins more seriously over the last year or so. Just about every night I am sorting through a pile of coins to find goodies I am missing from my collection. Within a month or so of collecting I became frustrated and quite overwhelmed. I almost stopped collecting because I couldn't figure out a way to catalogue everything that gave me the required reports without a lot of friction. For a long term project such as coin collecting I have strict requirements: Information must be available offline, easy to parse through, easy to add coins, and ideally under my own control.
While Numista is a fantastic resource, The collection and series tracking in my opinion is quite horrible, Especially if you collect by sets, and this is where my problem is born.
1 of every year, type, and mint.
That is the goal I have set forth. Is it doable? No. Is it insane? Yes. Should you also do it? Ill leave that up to you.
I made several posts asking about spreadsheets that collectors use, Talked to several collectors in person and It seems that each person who gave me a new spreadsheet example collected in a completely different way. In this post I would like to share my own spreadsheet and hopefully give inspiration or ideas for new collectors, or for collectors who want a tighter grip on their collection. This spreadsheet is a Google Sheets example but can be converted to excel with some formula changes.
Dashboard:
The Dashboard I have created is made up of seven different sections, each updating using various formulas from the ‘Total Collection’ page in the spreadsheet. Nothing here should be touched and should be allowed to auto update when needed.
Section 1: Header and overview

This section displays metrics such as coins owned, Coins you have marked Wantlisted, Coins you need to check if you still own them, Tracked completion percentage, tracked total, oldest owned, price paid vs estimated value vs face value. and more. This is the at-a-glance collection metrics. These use some enhanced formulas but nothing too insane. For example the Newest Owned formula is:
=IFERROR(MAX(FILTER('Total Collection'!F3:F,REGEXMATCH('Total Collection'!I3:I,"^(Owned|Check Owned)$"),'Total Collection'!F3:F<>"")),"")
Section 2: Recent additions and most valuable items:

This section shows the 10 most recent additions to your collection as well as the 10 most valuable items in your collection based on Estimated Value column.
Section 3 & 4: Graphs

I have this section showing collection value over time including worth, as well as the year occurrence graph for coins that I own. in my sheet the peak years seem to be 1999-2011 across all US denominations. Numista gives you similar graphs on your homepage and I liked them so I took them for my spreadsheet.
Section 5: Completion Status

This sorts out what you have in your wantlist and what you own and gives you a visual representation of your progress.
Section 6: Storage & Totals

This field can be auto populated based on what type of storage you use. For example If you use binders instead, In the coin entry add “Binder x” or however you mark your storage, and then in this section type that same storage name, and it will auto date range, show how many coins are in there, their face value and estimated value. This gives a quick visual guide to know where to look at a glance and how much each storage location is worth. If I wanted to find my 2002 quarter, This tells me I should look in BOX-US-QTR-002 which ranges from 2000-2015.
Section 7: Timeline & Milestones

This is simply a date and text space for you to add your own events and milestones you find fun. I use this for high value days where Im sorting through hundreds of coins, or when I got my first proof set, or finally got a coin Ive been looking for for a while.
All of these sections are auto calculated based on the information entered into ‘Total Collection’ page.
Total Collection: The heart of the data
The total collection has 4 main sections of data: Specifics, Quality, Worth, and Acquisition & Storage,
Specifics:

In the specifics section, you get your numista number, Internal ID, numerical value, denomination type, series/program, year, mint mark, design/type, and status whether it be owned, Wantlisted, check owned, or blank as a reference only. Each is automatically color coded upon selection.
Quality:

This section allows you to enter a relative grade, and if that coin needs an upgrade.
Worth:

Currency type, Price Paid, Face Value, Estimated value, Metal Type, weight, finess, silver content and melt value are all things you can add here. After you add weight and finess, the silver content and melt value are auto calculated. I enjoy adding weight to non precious coins so I can check how heavy the total collection is because I think that is a fun metric.
Acquisition & Storage:

Lastly, This section gives you a place to add the date you added to your collection, where you got that coin from, where that coin lives in your collection and a small space for notes.
Filling out these categories can take quite a long time especially if you are adding catalogue entries as references for your want list so that you can get an accurate completion percentage. Though I do believe it is worth it and for me has made collecting a LOT more fun. Seeing that percentage tick up every time I add a few more pennies to my collection and then back down as I add more catalogue entries to my wantlist.
Its taken a few months to get this spreadsheet set up the way that I like it and I think it is a fantastic way to get a little more granular with your collection. I also found it helps when I sit down to sort through piles of coins, I dont need to constantly change the numista page for wheat cents, and memorial cents, I just scroll up and down and if its red, set it aside to be added to the collection. That alone has made the collection process MUCH faster and much more enjoyable without having to memorize the catalogue number or have several open tabs.
So what do you think? Overkill or underkill? Would you use a sheet like this? How do your spreadsheets compare? If enough people are interested, I will post a link to the sheet so you can browse and check it out for yourself. I also have a world coin spreadsheet that is much the same, with a few other sections to show countries and under/over represented areas geographically.









