Not really, while a collector may pay more for a mint-state example of some of the older nickels, it is hard to find a buyer for those circulated coins. In fact, with the exception of key dates (such as the 1950 D) and the silver nickels struck during the war years (1942-1945) all Jefferson nickels are fairly common to come across in change and in bank rolls. In fact, you can most likely fill an album of Jefferson Nickels with the exception of a few blank spots, within a single $100 face box of bank wrapped rolls.
For the most part, 5 cents each.
5 cents. The only nickels to contain silver are the "war nickels" produced from 1943-1945 with a large mintmark over the Monticello. 1964 nickels use the same composition as today, have a high mintage and are easily found in pocket change. They are worth no more than 5 cents. There were over 2 billion nickels minted that year.
5 cents each. They're old but not rare. 1964 had mintage numbers of more than a billion.
Despite being over 50 years old, it's still worth five cents. There were over two billion nickels dated 1964.
Several billion were made. This is a very common date with no added value in circulated condition. A nice uncirculated one may be worth about 25 cents. Billions of nickels were minted in 1964 as a stopgap effort to substitute for higher-denomination silver coins that were being removed from circulation for melting. They show up in circulation more than almost any other date.
5.8 cents
No. It's the same copper/nickel blend as every* other U.S. nickel minted since 1866. There were a billion of them minted in 1964, and it's worth 5 cents. *The only U.S. nickels to contain any silver are the "war nickels" of 1942-1945.
25 cents
25 cents
It's worth exactly 5 cents.
It's worth 5 cents.
The melt value for a 1964 nickel is the same as any other date of nickels (except 1942-45), because unlike the dime and quarter, nickels weren't silver, and there was no change to it in 1965. As of 19 August 2013, U.S. nickels have a melt value of 4.6 cents.