25 cents
You have what's called a "flan". It's a coin blank that was put through the machine that puts on the edges, but was accidentally missed when the blanks were fed through the press that strikes images on the front and back. If it's a blank for a modern clad quarter with a copper core (check the edge) it might sell for about $5. However if it's an old silver quarter it could be worth 10 or 12 times that much.
Check with any local coin collector for sure, but this coin can be worth a LOT of money.
Assuming it's the same thickness as a normal dime, you have what's called a "flan". This error occurs when a coin blank accidentally slips into the bin with coins that have already been struck. If your flan has a smooth edge, it's worth about $1. If it has upturned edges like a regular coin but no design, it's worth about $2.
A 1 cent 'blank' (planchet): 95% copper is worth $3.00, a plated zinc is worth $1.50.
A blank planchet for a nickel is worth about $2.00
blank quarter errors are worth a couple dollars to an interested collector.
If it is a totally blank planchet, look at the edge. If it already has a raised rim like a normal quarter, it's worth about $5. However if the edge doesn't have a rim, it's worth about $10.
25 cents.
You have what's called a "flan". It's a coin blank that was put through the machine that puts on the edges, but was accidentally missed when the blanks were fed through the press that strikes images on the front and back. If it's a blank for a modern clad quarter with a copper core (check the edge) it might sell for about $5. However if it's an old silver quarter it could be worth 10 or 12 times that much.
Check with any local coin collector for sure, but this coin can be worth a LOT of money.
It is worth a quarter :D
Most likely the reverse side of your coin has been sanded smooth and has no value other than that of the copper in it.
The 2006 quarter is composed of a core of pure copper with outer layers of copper-nickel. If there was truly no copper then there would be no coin. If the usual copper line is missing from the edge of the quarter it is not because there is no copper in it but because as the blank quarter was stamped out of the sheet of metal, the outer layers containing the nickel were "smeared" over the edge of the blank quarter by the cutting die and concealing the customary copper band. Scraping the edge of the coin would reveal the copper.
Assuming it's the same thickness as a normal dime, you have what's called a "flan". This error occurs when a coin blank accidentally slips into the bin with coins that have already been struck. If your flan has a smooth edge, it's worth about $1. If it has upturned edges like a regular coin but no design, it's worth about $2.
Chances are it is worth something. The question though is, was it a nickel struck on a quarter blank? Or was the nickel simply struck off-center? If it was struck on a quarter blank, the edge will have both redish brown and white. If it was struck on a nickel blank it will be a solid color. The best thing to do is take it in to several coin shops and get different opinions on what its worth. It is hard to give values for error coins sight unseen. But some coin dealers specialize in errors while others use them simply for curiosities.
Yes, one dollar.
A quarter is worth 25 cents or $0.25.