Yes, definitely. A British £5 note is money. It will be accepted in any shop in Britain.
The Royal Mint produced no British Five Pound coins from 1938 to 1979 inclusive.
There has been a British Five Pound coin on and off since 1817. The British decimal Five Pound gold bullion coin was first issued in 1980 and the Five Pound "Crown" coin was first issued in 1990. The current British Five Pound "Crown" coin is intended to be a non-circulating legal tender commemorative coin. The Royal Mint has no current plans to produce a general circulation Five Pound coin in the foreseeable future.
British coins currently in circulation include the - 1 Penny 2 Pence 5 Pence 10 Pence 20 Pence 50 Pence 1 Pound 2 Pound 5 pound (although it is legal tender, it is not often seen in circulation) British banknotes currently in circulation include the - Five Pound Ten Pound Twenty Pound Fifty Pound
British Coins currently in circulation include the - 1 Penny 2 Pence 5 Pence 10 Pence 20 Pence 50 Pence 1 Pound 2 Pound 5 pound (although it is legal tender, it is not often seen in circulation) British banknotes currently in circulation include the - Five Pound Ten Pound Twenty Pound Fifty Pound
British Pound denominations currently in circulation include - One Pound coin Two Pound coin Five Pound coin (legal tender and often found in circulation) Five Pound note Ten Pound note Twenty Pound note Fifty Pound note
A five pound note (or a £5 note) is a banknote worth £5. If this is a modern note, it is probably a British £5 note.
There was no British 1888 Five Pound coin minted. The Five Pound coin with the Jubilee portrait of the Queen was only minted for Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee year of 1887. During her reign the only other dates, with different designs, were 1839 and 1893. A number of forgeries dated 1888 are known.
If you refer to the British Five Pound (Crown) coin, they do not have a mintmark. They were all minted at the Royal Mint in Wales.
See the link below.
See the link below.
IN British empire pre-decimal currency, one crown was five shillings/one quarter of a pound/ 60 old pennies/25 new pence
It's worth exactly 5 pence.