Sorry, no US one ounce silver dollars dated 1972. The first one was struck in 1986.
If your coin is an Eisenhower dollar dated 1972. None of the Eisenhower dollars regardless of date or mintmark struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums
How much for once of silver
As of 4/23/08 one once of silver is worth roughly $17
The worth is a dollar...
If your 1972 coin is a uncirculated example it may be worth about $5.00 because the 1971 & 1972 issue coins were not included in the Uncirculated Mint sets sold from the Mint in those years. For the Eisenhower series some of the coins struck at the San Francisco Mint (S Mintmark) were 40% silver, but in general none of the Eisenhower dollars regardless of date or mintmark struck for general circulation contain any silver or have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.
No, once it is currency, It's property of the Treasury and to only be use as legal tender. Most, if not all coins, are worth / cost more than face value (pennies cost 1 to 1.5 cents in materials).
50 cents once you break it out of the glass/plastic :) It is worth about $15 I believe.
The book value is about 8 to 10 dollars in the Krause Standard Catalog of World Coins. The ten dollar version of the same coin has one once of silver so has the real value.
It is worth the price of silver, right now one troy once of silver is worth $27.35 but that changes daily or even hourly.
Technically you can refine silver plate from metal items. However, silver plate by weight is a tiny fraction of a percent of the total item. It is rarely worth the expense of the refining process.
It is only worth what someone is willing to pay for it as a collectible. as for silver value it is worth $0. Even though it has some silver, once it is plated, it is hard to separate from the other metals. Maybe you could get $20.00 on ebay for it.
Yes, but the real question is WHY? A genuine silver dollar dated 1935 or earlier is worth at least $17 to $20 for its silver content alone, and could be worth much more if it's a collectible coin. If you're using the term "silver" dollar to refer to the copper-nickel Eisenhower and Susan B. Anthony coins minted in the 1970s, the answer there is that these coins have no extra value and still turn up in change once in a while. Anthony dollars in particular are completely interchangeable with modern brass Sacajawea and Presidential dollars, so you can use them in vending machines or transit fareboxes. You can spend them in stores, too, but most clerks have never seen one and confuse them with quarters because the two coins are almost identical, which is the reason that the Anthony dollar failed in the first place.
depends on the year it was made the type of coin it is and the condition it is in...need more of a description to help