






🔵 Wrap your coins like a pro—because every cent counts!
Royal Sovereign’s Assorted Coin Preformed Wrappers offer 216 easy-to-use, pre-printed blue wrappers—54 each for pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters. Crafted from 100% post-consumer recycled content, these compact wrappers provide an eco-conscious, efficient solution for coin organization favored by professionals and savvy savers alike.





| Manufacturer | 0 |
| Brand | Royal Sovereign |
| Item Weight | 7.8 ounces |
| Product Dimensions | 7.7 x 7.2 x 4 inches |
| Item model number | FSW-216N |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Color | Blue |
| Pre-printed | Denomination |
| Total Recycled Content Percentage | 100 |
| Post-Consumer Recycled Content Percentage | 100 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Size | Each |
| Manufacturer Part Number | FSW-216N |
G**N
Works Great With My Royal Sovereign Sort 'N Save Manual Coin Sorter
I have the inexpensive "Royal Sovereign Sort 'N Save Manual Coin Sorter", which is one of the machines that these coin wrappers were made to be used with. They work great. One end is closed, so you simply close the other end, after being filled. The only "issue" is that four different wrappers are inside each other. . . So one dime, one penny, one nickel and one quarter. I understand why they do this. . . to save space. Otherwise the box would be four-times as large. . . but. .. inevitably. . .you're going to use more of one. . .and fewer of another. . . and then you have to go and "hunt" through all of the wrappers to find the one you want. If you have the space, you can certainly separate them into different boxes yourself.Royal Sovereign Sort 'N Save Manual Coin Sorter, Black/Clear (QS-1)
S**T
You'll love these. Smaug will hate them...
...because Smaug likes to sleep on his piles of golden coins (Hobbit fans will get it).These preformed wrappers are great! I just finished wrapping almost $1,400 worth of quarters, dimes, and nickels using these rolls and these coin tubes (PM Company Color-Coded Coin Counting Tube for Pennies Through Quarters (05032)) and they worked amazing.I was dreading wrapping all those coins because I remember how I did it as a kid--opening a flat coin roll, folding one end closed, dropping coins into it hoping they all lay flat, and then folding the other end closed. I imagined I'd be done just in time to have a nice dinner at The Restaurant At The End Of The Universe (sorry, another nerdy reference). Basically, I was imagining it would be a nightmare rolling coins.These rolls made wrapping coins a breeze. It took me just 4 hours to wrap fourteen-hundred bucks worth of coins.All of the coin wrappers were perfect. I had none that were crushed or deformed in any way that made them unusable. I highly recommend these and will be buying this type again when I have a lot of coins to wrap.
B**A
Worth the extra couple of dollars for quality coin tubes.
I had about $700 dollars in coins to wrap up manually, and these worked exceptionally well. They came in a box, which did well at preventing the preformed tubes from being smashed. The coins slid in easily and the ends folded over well. The paper is heavy duty and doesn't collapse easily like some other brands. Even though these were a bit pricier than some other brands, I feel like it was worth the money. I would spend it again.
M**S
Minor Hiccups
Obviously work for the purpose and the price is right if you really need that many. I found that the are not all the same length which is annoying. What I don't understand is why I or anyone else would buy these when many banks like mine give them to you for free. The only benefit is one end is put together, you still have the problem of the coins eventually falling out since I doubt anyone can figure out how to fold them without that happening. Perhaps if you use a machine the are more beneficial. For hand rollers like myself either get them from your bank or buy the ones from another brand where you can buy them by denomination as this company only sells sets. Penny wrappers are the ones people need most. Using the free bank ones from now on but at least I tried it.
S**Y
Does the job
The "open" tubular coin tubes are MUCH easier to use than those (of other brands) which come folded flat.Smaller coin tubes come packed within the larger ones (to minimize the size of the box)---so fishing out, say all the 5 cent tubes, might be annoying. Large operations should probably buy each size tube separately. For ordinary home or small institution coin-packing, no problem---you'll probably used several sizes at a session anyway.I've formerly used a (commercial?) kind of tube which came with one end already rolled, which was much more convenient for hand-packing. Unfortunately, those wouldn't work with the plastic coin "packing" device that I now use.Otherwise, the simple tubes worked perfectly. I found no defects. I had no problems.> Click on “Stoney” just below the product title to see my other reviews, or leave a comment to ask a question.
B**L
Perfect coin rolls
This work perfectly with the Royal Sovereign hand crank coin roller. They are very sturdy and fit right into the coin roller with ease. Not sure my bank loves me when I come in once a year with all the rolled coins, but its money and they have to deal with it.
N**T
These need to be available in individual denominations
The rolls work extremely well with the Royal Sovereign Sort 'N Save manual coin sorter. They fit perfectly. You just remove the small hopper full of coins, push the roll down into it, flip it over to get all the coins into it, fold in the end, and you're done. That said, I gave this 3 stars for the following reason:It is highly unlikely that, whatever your application, you will use the same number of rolls for all of the denominations of coins. So, while this assortment has a lot of rolls in it, it becomes expensive when you consider that you are likely to run out of one or two particular denominations while having many of the others remaining. For me, I roll mostly pennies. I have already used half of the penny rolls and haven't use a single one of any of the other denominations. So, while these rolls work really well with the machine, they need to allow us to purchase individual denominations instead of an assortment where we may not even use 20% of the rolls, but still be left wanting.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 days ago