£5
Currently, British general circulation currency comes in the following denominations - 1 Penny coin 2 Pence coin 5 Pence coin 10 Pence coin 20 Pence coin 50 Pence coin 1 Pound coin 2 Pound coin 5 Pound note 10 Pound note 20 Pound note 50 Pound note
A 1889 gold 5 pound coin is worth 5 pounds of gold, while a 1889 2 pound gold coin is only worth 2 pounds of gold.
In the UK we have a commemorative five pound (£5) coin. Five pound coins are legal tender, but are intended as souvenirs and are not usually seen in circulation.
my £5 diamond jubilee coin is made from cupro nickel and weighs 28.28g.
it is around a dollar, over 9 million were minted so they are not that rare
These coins are still potentially in circulation so, unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they are worth 50 Pence.
A £5 coin is the exact same value as a £5 note or 5 £1 coins etc
No, they wont accept it because they want to have coins to make change for when other people buy stuff with like 50 pound notes - so what will a 5 pound coin come use to them? - Hope this helps.
5 lemons!
Yes, they have 5 branches
The Royal Mint has never issued a 5 Dollar coin for British use, much less one with a "5 Dollar" symbol on it. The British use the Pound and issue a "5 Pound" coin, but not in 1988. The coin is possibly from one of the 50 plus Commonwealth countries and should have the country name on it somewhere, most likely Australia, Canada or New Zealand.