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Really depends. There is little to no demand for uncirculated golden dollars unless there is something unusual about them. If you stick it on eBay you might get ~$30 or so if you're lucky.
It depends on where and how you found it, and its mint mark. 2006 Sacajawea "golden" (actually brass) dollars were minted only for collectors but some have ended up in circulation. If you got it in change, it's only worth face value. If you have an uncirculated P-mint coin in its original package it might retail for $2 to $12 depending on quality. If you have an uncirculated D-mint coin the range would be $4 to $18.
A Sacagawea Dollar in proof condition that carries a 2000-S mint mark is worth: $20.00. The 2000-D and 2000-P were minted in uncirculated condition and are worth: $3 - $5.00.
These coins are very common. Unless they are uncirculated or have the mint mark "S" they are worth only $1.
Remember, there is no gold in a "golden" dollar. They're made of manganese-brass and contain about a dime's worth of metal. If the coin is uncirculated and in an original mint package or a plastic slab, it might sell for $1.25 or $1.50. A dealer will pay you face value, and any bank that has them in their vaults will sell them for $1 each.
Well, the coin should be made out of brass and should appear "golden" and not copper. But it really depends on the year, but for the most part assuming it is an uncirculated proof, I'd say it would be worth in the neighborhood of $3-5 or so.
The date and mint mark are on the edge of the coin. They are worth about $10 in upper grade uncirculated condition.
It's still worth one dollar.
Gold - or just Golden?If you have a gold-colored Sacajawea dollar minted since 2000 or a presidential dollar minted since 2007, it is worth one dollar if you found it in change. If it's in uncirculated condition or a proof coin in the original mint packaging it might retail for $2 to $4. Ordinary Sacajawea and Presidential golden dollars that you get from a bank are struck from a composition of copper with a manganese brass cladding that gives it a golden hue. Their actual composition is 88.5% copper, 6% zinc, 3.5% manganese, 2% nickel, and are NOT rare. Feel free to spend them.But if you have a 22 kt. gold dollar coin from the 1800s, it could be anywhere from a couple of hundred dollars up to a six-digit figure, depending on its date, mint mark, and condition.
They are worth face unless uncirculated. If you found it in pocket change it is not uncirculated and is worth 25 cents.
In spite of being called "golden dollars", all Sacajawea and Presidential dollars are made of layers of manganese-brass bonded to a copper core. Regardless of popular misinformation, they do not contain any gold at all and any you find in change are only worth $1.
It's worth one dollar.