They have no gold in them, they're made of brass and are worth just 1 dollar. Spend them.
The current "golden" dollars aren't real gold at all. They're just gold-colored, and are made of manganese brass. After all, that much gold would be worth several hundred dollars, so even the government wouldn't be foolish enough to circulate coins worth 600 or 700 times what you pay for them at a bank!
One dollar. It's made of brass, not gold and over a billion were made.
If they are $1 dollar coins, spend them. Just gold colored.
Ten cents - it's not real gold, it's plated. The US never made gold dimes.
Not gold and not plated. It's made of manganese brass. (And yes, it's worth something: it's worth one dollar.)
The current "golden" dollars aren't real gold at all. They're just gold-colored, and are made of manganese brass. After all, that much gold would be worth several hundred dollars, so even the government wouldn't be foolish enough to circulate coins worth 600 or 700 times what you pay for them at a bank!
More information is needed. The U.S. minted real gold dollars in the 19th century and these can now be worth large amounts of money. The "goldEN" dollars minted since 2000 are made of brass, not gold, and are of course worth only $1. If you have one of the older real-gold dollars, please post a new question with the coin's date and mint mark, if it has one.
About $2000.00. Sacajawea dollars are worth just that a dollar.. they are made up of copper and nickel with a thin Gold plating.
All the 2000 to date dollar coins are NOT gold, they are made from brass, that's what gives them the gold color.
It's made of brass, not gold, and is worth one dollar.
One dollar. It's made of brass, not gold and over a billion were made.
Sacajawea dollars aren't gold and they aren't plated. They're made of a metal called manganese brass, and the outer layers are mechanically bonded to a copper core. About a billion Sacajawea dollars were made in 2000 so unless your coin is either a proof or uncirculated one, it's still only worth $1.
A lot more info is needed. Are you referring to a real gold dollar from the 1800s, or one of the gold-color dollars issued since 2000?The former are worth at least $200 and maybe thousands, depending on their date, mint mark, and condition. If that's what you have, post a new, separate question with those details.Modern gold-color dollars issued since 2000 are actually made of brass and are worth exactly $1.00.
If they are $1 dollar coins, spend them. Just gold colored.
Ten cents - it's not real gold, it's plated. The US never made gold dimes.
No there is not (this would be impossobe) although there is a laptop with pure gold casing said to be worth around 6 billion dollars!!
$1. They're made of brass rather than gold, and are ordinary circulation coins issued by the billions.