100 i
100 5's
100 10's
50 20's
50 100's
An official "US Mint Set" is a Uncirculated coin set. They have uncirculated examples of every denomination issued from each mint for the year of issue. They are the same.
For me to provide to you a value, I will need to know the following info: 1. the denomination of the coins (are they nickels, dimes, quarters, etc) and 2. the year and mint mark of each coin.nickel 25 2006 p
Please tell me the denomination of the coin - that is, is it a dime, quarter, half-dollar, etc. I will be able to relay its value once I am aware of its denomination and mint state.
In 2011, the U.S. Mint produced 4,938,540,000 pennies.
S and P aren't grades, they're mint marks indicating where a coin was struck. There are many other possible mint marks for U.S. coins as well, depending on their denomination and date.
The answer's a double no. First, bills aren't minted; they're printed. Only coins are minted. Second, there were no US bills of any denomination with a 1954 series date.
No official Mint sets were issued in 1919 but if you have assembled a uncirculated set of each denomination released for circulation from each Mint, it could have a very good value, depending on the grade of each coin.
It doesn't cost the Mint anything because the Mint makes coins, not bills. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing prints bills. Anyway, the new purple and gray bills cost about 4 cents each to produce.
Trick question: the answer is none, because the US Mint doesn't print $10 bills. The US Mint makes coins.
An official "US Mint Set" is a Uncirculated coin set. They have uncirculated examples of every denomination issued from each mint for the year of issue. They are the same.
There are no $200 bills. But Seriously, Its either 100 $2 or 40 $5, and I assume only the Mint deals with that many $2 bills.
You need to be a lot more specific. What country? What denomination(s)? If U.S. coins, what mint mark? If bills, what bank issued them? Please post a new and more detailed question.
The U.S. did not mint coins or print bills with that date. If you have a different year, a different denomination, or a bill issued by a private bank, please post a new question with those details.
A trick question! The answer is "none", because the Mint makes coins, not bills. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing makes paper money. The number of $1 bills printed each year varies widely depending on the economy but averages around 5 billion. Assuming the BEP operates about 350 days per year that works out to roughly 14.3 million $1 bills per day.
This varies widely on the type of coin, denomination, material, condition, mint, and many other factors. Be a bit more specific please :-)
It depends on the type of coin the date and denomination on were the mint mark is located
The U.S. Mint produces coins not paper currency.