A 2004 nickel is worth 5 cents. A gold-plated '04 nickel is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. There is no standard market value for modified coins like that.
It is only gold plated. Since it is gold plated it is an altered coin and is worth 50 cents.
If you mean one of the 4 Westward Journey nickels dated 2004 and 2005 it's a novelty item that has no numismatic value at all. But it's still a nickel.
This is not a Mint error coin. It has likely been altered by placing the nickel and dime in a vise and squeezing them together causing a reverse image of the dime to appear on the nickel. The coin has no numismatic collectible value.
That depends on the year. If it's 1938-2003 or 2006-present, the reverse shows Monticello, which was Jefferson's home. In 2004 and '05, it was the Westward Journey series. The '04 nickels feature either Indian Peace Medals or a keelboat, and the '05 coins had an American bison or the Pacific coast.
All 2003 US nickels carry the standard portrait of Thomas Jefferson on the front and an image of his home, Monticello, on the back. None are special and none have any extra value in circulated condition. 2004 and 2005 nickels carry different designs in honor of the Lewis and Clark bicentennial, but again any that you find in change have no extra worth.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
Yep....... a nickel
A 2004 Jefferson nickel is still 5 cents. Millions are in circulation.
There is no such thing as an 1803 U.S. nickel. You have a Lewis & Clark commemorative nickel that was minted in 2004. Turn it over and look next to Jefferson's portrait. These are worth exactly 5 cents.
The same one that's been on the nickel from 1938 Thomas Jefferson
It is worth a nickel. 2004 is only 13 years ago. Not very long ago.
It is a 2004 Jefferson Nickel of the Westward Journey of Lewis and Clark series.
2million
A Louisiana Purchase 2004 nickel is a common nickel and is worth face value, which is 5 cents.
The FS are the initials of Felix Schlag, who designed the coin. Those letters are on every Jefferson nickel from 1966 to 2004. Every single coin in that time frame is worth 5 cents.
Unless it's an uncirculated or proof coin, it's worth 5¢. The "ship" is actually a keelboat. The coin is a 2004 Jefferson Nickel from the Westward Journey of Lewis and Clark series, and hundreds of millions were minted.