The coin has no silver value. 1965 Washington quarters contain no silver, 1964 was the last year for 90% silver coins to be issued for general circulation.
As of 21st June 2009, $65 = £39.41
Numismedia lists the value around $7 dollars for clad(non-silver) and $65 for silver proof sets as of a 5/2012.
You would have to get about a 73% in the 3rd quarter to receive a 65% overall.
The value of any Jefferson nickel with the designation of Full Step is many times higher (or how much are you willing to pay) than other coins and varies by year and mint mark. Also the term is used only with the grades of MS-65 or higher. This is one example: 1946 in MS-65 retail list price $10.00- 1946 in MS-65FS retail list price $215.00. There is no simple answer for this question
anything between 55 and 65 depending on your BMI
If it is in MS-60 condition it is worth $8.00. If it is in MS-65 condition it is worth $25.00.
$50-$65
$50-$65
It depends if it is AU-50 or like MS-65
August 2011>> This coin in MS-65 uncirculated grade is worth approx. $700 according to Numismedia.
The present value of 1 gram of sterling silver is around 65-70 cents (8/2010) so 10.6 grams is worth a little over $7.
They're not pure silver, they're 90% silver. If you have common-date 90% silver coins in circulated condition, the price will fluctuate with the precious metals market. Currently, the spot price of silver is somewhere near $14 a troy ounce. At that price, the melt value of a quarter is $2.50, so a dealer should pay about $2 for a pre-65 quarter and sell one for $3. In large quantities ($1000 bags) the prices will be closer to the melt value.
As of 4/12 a 1898 O Morgan silver dollar in MS-65 condition is worth $238.
Proof coins are not struck for circulation so high grade coins are more common than a high grade business strike.
With bullion silver at $7 an ounce, your quarter is worth $1.25 but a major third party authentication service grades it at MS-65, it will list at $15. Of course, getting it certified will cost you about $40. Silver bullion has more than doubled since the first answer was posted. As of 06/2008 bullion is about $17.50, which raises the metal value of common-date silver Washington quarters to around $3. As a rule of thumb, divide the price of silver by 6 for a rough value of a common-date quarter.
You bet. A tip for youto tell difference, just note the difference on the side between that quarter & a modern one. You notice the modern one has a band of copper in it-silver one's (pre-65) lack the band.
of normal composition, 1 dollar in ms-63 condition, and 6 dollars in ms-65 condition ( these are different conditions for uncirculated coins. this coin is only worth face value if circulated.) of silver clad composition, 4 dollars in ms-63 and 7 dollars in ms-65. silver clad high condition proof, is 8 dollars. normal composition proof is 4 dollars in good condition.