On the 1964 coin the mint mark, "D", is located on the reverse side (tails) of the coin between the eagle claw and the word "Half". There were no half dollars minted at Philadelphia in 1964.During 1965, 1966 and 1967 there were no mint marks at all on any of the half dollars. Beginning in 1968 the mint mark was place on the obverse side (heads) of the coin and was located above the date and below Kennedy's neck. In 1968, 1969 and 1970, half dollars were only struck at Denver "D" and San Francisco "S". The "S" mint coins were proof strikes. In 1971 half dollars were struck at all 3 mints but "P" for Philadelphia was not placed on the coins until 1980.
Look underneath JFK's neck.
A Kennedy Half Dollar that was minted in 2007 and carries a mint mark of "S," was produced in clad and silver. The clad in a proof state is worth: $4; in silver, the value is: $7.00.
Hammer and sickle
Please check the denomination of the coin. A 1971 One Dollar coin is an EISENHOWER dollar not a JFK dollar. Kennedy is only on Half Dollars. No matter what coin it actually is, both are just face value.
August 12, 2009 The Kennedy Bicentennial Half Dollar in MS64 is valued at $15 with either mint mark.
1964 Kennedy halves are extremely common, currently worth about $10 for the silver content. Also, V isn't a mint mark on any US coin.
There are no mintmarks on 1965 Kennedy half dollars.
It depends on the type. There were two types: silver-clad and a copper-nickel-clad. Silver-clad contains 0.14792 ounces of pure silver. All have an S mint mark. Copper-nickel-clad does not contain any silver. They can have a D, S, or no mint mark.
If the coin has one it would be just below Kennedy's neck on the obverse of the coin.
If the coin has one it would be just below Kennedy's neck on the obverse of the coin.
It's just a common date half dollar that's still found on circulation, spend it.
The "P" Mint mark was not used on half dollars until 1980, it's only a half dollar so spend it.
1976, Kennedy Bicentennial Half Dollar; with no mint mark, copper-nickel clad, uncirculated-$1.25 with D mint mark, copper-nickel clad, uncirculated-$1.25 with S mint mark, copper-nickel clad, proof-$1.75 with S mint mark, silver clad, uncirculated-$4.00, proof-$5.00There were so many hundreds of millions of these minted that if your coin has been in circulation, it has no added value and probably never will.