A 1907 Deutschmark is no longer legal tender. It may have some value as a collectible if it is in extremely fine condition.
An added note from a buyer/seller of coins: Melt value is what matters first for most older common circulated coins.With the upward price of silver, melt value is the benchmark for valuing silver coins. Unless a silver coin is rare or in extremely good condition most of us who buy coins judge them almost entirely by their melt value. The value of the 1907 Funf Mark is mostly in its melt value. In 1907 the German Reich marks were made with 5 grams of silver per mark. So, a 5 (funf) Mark had 25 grams of silver in it. If we figure 28.35 grams in an ounce, then 25 grams are about .8818 oz of silver. Simply multiply .8818 by today's spot price for silver and you have the melt value of the coin. As I write this, the spot is about $18 oz. for silver, so the melt value of the Deutsches Reich 1907 Funf Mark is about $15.87 today.
Expect to buy a coin like this in average to good condition for up to $25, but don't be surprised if you have to take somewhat less than melt value for it. Recently I bought one from a reputable online silver and gold bullion dealer for about a 30% premium over melt.
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Until the end of WWI, higher-denomination German coins were minted by the individual states that comprised the German Empire. The collector value of a 5-mark coin can vary depending on the issuing state. As of 10/2014 some representative retail collector prices from sammler.com, a major German collectibles site include:
Baden: US$125 - $200
Bayern: $25 - $100
Hamburg: $50 - $125
Preußen: $25 - $60
Sachsen: $65 - $125
For a more specific response, please post a new, separatequestion that includes the name of the issuing state.
sammler.com, a major German collectibles site, lists the following approximate retail values as of 02/2013:
"A" mint mark (Berlin):
Slightly worn - US$2.70
Almost no wear - US$5.40
Uncirculated - US$8.10
"D" (München [Munich]):
Slightly worn - $4.10
Almost no wear - $10.10
Uncirculated - $20.30
"E" (Muldenhütte):
Slightly worn - $6.80
Almost no wear - $23.60
Uncirculated - $47.30
"F" (Stuttgart):
Slightly worn - $6.80
Almost no wear - $16.90
Uncirculated - $40.50
"G" (Karlsruhe):
Slightly worn - $6.80
Almost no wear - $16.90
Uncirculated - $40.50
"J" (Hamburg):
Slightly worn - $10.10
Almost no wear - $20.30
Uncirculated - $54.00
Please check your coin again and post a new, separatequestion with more information that might help to identify it. A search of various German numismatic resources indicates that production of 5-mark coins ended in 1915 and didn't resume until 1927.
If your coin has a denomination of 5 pfennige , its value ranges from perhaps 65¢ to a couple of dollars depending on condition and mint mark.
In average condition, any modern 1 deutsche mark coin (minted 1950-1996) is essentially only worth face value - about 50 US cents at the time Germany switched to the euro.
If your coin is older than that or a different denomination, please post a new, separate question with its denomination and date.
The 1904 Deutches Reich funf mark can bring an upwards of anywhere from 1000 dollars to 2600 dollars to the right buyer
About $10
50.00
This is a Bavaria (German State) coin. It is .900 silver and weighs 27.77 grams. It is worth 15.00 dollars or more.
Germany
What ever some is will to pay for it.
Not enough information. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination.
Gold bullion is based on the going market for the metal and is usually purchased in bars with a troy ounce weight of about 400. The 1893 Deutsches Reich 20-mark coin weighs only about 8 grams, so it would not have the same value as a bullion brick, but a coin in good shape can be worth over $200.
About $240 USD
A 1889 Deutsches Reich 20 Mark gold coin is 90% pure (10% copper). It should weigh 7,9649 g, giving it a gold content of 7,1685 g.
Yes there is 50 mark coin from 1878 with Wilhelm the 2th Deutsche Kaiser Konig V.Preussen on it .
A 1934 Deutsches Reich 5 reichsmark in good shape with a D mint mark is worth anywhere from $17 to about $50. A coin with an E mint is worth about $17 to $70 depending on its condition.
Underneath the Eagle on the back of the coin one to the left and one on the right of the tail
This German coin is fairly valuable depending on circulation condition. It can range in value from 20 dollars to 400 dollars.