Absolutely! Nearly all larger banks should have plenty of them - about 2 billion of the new "golden" (actually brass) dollars have been minted since 2000. Many larger cities also use them on their transit systems, and change machines will give change in $1 coins.
None. There are no coins in a dollar. A dollar is a paper bill.
62 copper dollar coins
The quarter dollar, the half dollar and all dollar coins.
Aside from the one dollar coin, other coins have a face value of less than one dollar. In the past, there were larger value coins, but they haven't been used since the 1930s.
1 coin= $1 dollar piece 2 coins= 2 $0.50 pieces and so on. The least number of coins impossible to go into a dollar is 77 coins.
5.5
There are thousands of coins in the US, but if you mean circulation coins, there is the penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, Native American dollar, and presidential dollar.
Please rephrase question, no dollar coins were struck in the 1960's
Dollar coins are legal tender and should be taken at any place of business.
-- If the coins are dollar coins, all it takes is one of them. -- If the coins are pennies, it takes 100 of them. -- So a dollar can't be less than 1 or more than 100 coins.
The US had 20 dollar gold coins and also 10, 5, 2 1/2 and 1 dollar gold coins.
Three half-dollars (three 50-cent coins). In US coins, a dollar and two quarters (dollar coins are not well-circulated).