The US never made gold quarters. For one thing, they'd be worth hundreds of dollars so it wouldn't make any financial sense to put them in circulation at 25¢ each!
What you have is a coin that was plated for one of those "special collectibles" sets sold on TV and in the backs of popular magazines. The coins underneath are worth exactly a quarter, the gold plating is worth only a few cents, the package is a couple of bucks. The rest of the $25 to $100 price covers nothing but advertising and hype.
7.125
A quarter of an inch = 0.635 cm
A quarter is 25 cents in the USA.
That depends what it is a quarter of.
It's just a quarter, spend it.
There has never been a gold quarter issued by the U.S. Mint.
The US quarter eagle has .12094oz of pure gold
July 24, 2009 Gold plating a coin destroys its numismatic value. The Bicentennial quarter is worth but a quarter plus the value of the bit of gold used to plate it.
The gold plating adds nothing to the value of 25 cents, unless you find someone that wants it, it's a quarter.
Not enough to make money on A piece of gold the size of a quarter will plate the Empire State Building
Not much about 25 cents worth it's plated.
25 cents if the quarter was made in 1965 or later. Gold plating really adds nothing to the value of a coin and is considered to be damage to a collector. While interesting, the amount of gold used in gold plating is too small to be stripped off and sold and make a profit. However, if the quarter is dated 1964 or earlier, it is a 90% silver quarter and is worth about $6.25 for the silver content in the quarter, but the gold adds nothing to the value.
The Actual Gold Weight (AGW) of a Quarter Eagle is .12094oz of pure gold. Total weight of the coin is 4.18 grams.
Please rephrase question.
It's gold-plated, not solid gold, as US quarters have never been made of gold. It might sell for a couple dollars.
The coins is 1/10thoz of gold. The spot price of gold is $1095.60 as I type this so the value is $109.56
25 cents. It's gold-plated but not gold. It's an ordinary quarter that was plated with a tiny amount of gold and sold as a "collectible". If you think about it for a few seconds, a circulating gold quarter would be worth hundreds of dollars given the current price of the metal. Not even the densest bureaucrat would authorize a coin worth that much and put it into circulation for 25 cents.