Yes. From 2000 to 2006 the majority of Canadian nickels were struck in plated steel but some were also made from an alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel.
The steel coins will stick to a magnet but the cupronickel ones won't.
5 cents...in the United States. 0.0380536 euros 0.0608717 canadian 2.43191 rupees
A nickel doesn't necessarily cost anything. To receive a nickel though, you have to either trade in another value of money and ask for that quantity instead. The value of the nickel is 5 cents but it doesn't necessarily cost anything. Correction If you're referring to the value of a nickel to a coin collector, it depends on the coin's date, condition, and mint mark. Pretty much anything found in change today isn't worth more than 5 cents but older nickels can be worth anywhere from a dime to many hundreds of thousands of dollars - - - but as noted, "it depends". In the first decade of the 21st century, commodity prices for copper and nickel, which make up the five-cent coin, rose dramatically, pushing the cost of manufacturing a nickel from 3.46 cents in fiscal year 2003 to 10.09 cents in fiscal year 2012.
It's from a set of ordinary quarters that were plated by a private company and sold at high markups as so-called "collectibles". Unfortunately there's almost no secondary market for these items, which means it's really just a copper-nickel coin with a thin plating of gold worth a couple of cents.
Please look at the coin again, 2003 was last date for Jefferson nickel
The coin can't be solid copper. From 1965 to date all quarters are made from a copper-nickel sandwich composition. If it's a dark color, it's likely been exposed to some chemical that has corroded it. Take it to a coin dealer for an assessment.
It's just 5 cents so spend it. All Jefferson nickels from 1938 to 2003 and again in 2006 have the word Monticello on the reverse
As of 2003, no active nickel mines existed in the United States. U.S. nickel consumption declined from 231,000 tons in 2000 to 218,000 tons in 2003.
first class stamps were increased from 37 cents to 39 cents and post cards from 23 cents to 24 cents
it was made out of some of the first gold found in the county
50 cents.
37 cents until it was reissued for 41 cents.
80 cents