Eisenhower Dollars were minted from 1971 through 1978 at the Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco mints. The mint mark is located on the Obverse [heads] side of the coin at the base of Eisenhower's neck and above the date. A letter "D" indicates the coin was minted at the Denver mint. An "S" indicates the coin was minted at the San Francisco mint. If there is no letter, that indicates the coin was minted at Philadelphia. Please examine your coin to determine the date it was minted and the mint where it was struck. When you have this information, post a new question concerning it and an estimated value can be given.
Eisenhower silver dollars were not well-circulated. Uncirculated coins from 1971 are worth a few times their original value whereas worn, circulated coins are worth only a few cents more than their original value.
A 1922 P brilliant uncirculated dollar peace dollar is worth about $200.00. It is 90% silver and 10% copper.
Minimum...$1.00
No US dollar coin is dated 1975, look at the coin again and post new question.
1971 Eisenhower Dollar; with no mint mark, extra fine condition-$1.50, uncirculated-$3.50 with D mint mark, extra fine condition-$1.50, uncirculated-$2.50 with S mint mark, uncirculated-$6.50, proof-$7.00 I assume you're referring to an Eisenhower dollar. If so, it's not silver. Check the edge - it's made of the same copper/nickel "sandwich" metal as dimes and quarters. So unless your coin is a proof coin in its original package, it's only worth face value. Added 6/19/10 The value of the coin, of course, depends on the value of silver at the time of sale/determination. The 1971-S (out of the San Francisco Mint), is 40% silver, as opposed to the aforementioned "copper/nickel 'sandwich'," which means the value is much higher than those from other mints.
A 1971 Eisenhower Dollar in MS60 condition is worth: $10.00 However it's made of copper-nickel, not silver!
No Eisenhower dollar (1971-1978) struck for circulation contains any silver. Only some proof & uncirculated coins sold from the Mint were struck in 40% silver.
This would be the 1972 Silver Eisenhower dollar variety from the San Francisco Mint. In uncirculated condition, it would be worth about $8 and if you have a Proof coin, it would be worth about $9.30.
Only proof or special uncirculated Eisenhower dollars contain silver and that's only 40% or 0.3161oz of pure silver, but these coins were not made for circulation. If you got the coin from a bank or as change, spend it it's just a dollar
None of the Eisenhower dollars made for circulation have any silver in them and are only one dollar.
Not much I'm afraid, unless it has an "S" mintmark and is 40% silver and worth about $6.50-ish in silver content. Collector demand for Eisenhower dollars are rather low and many banks still have non-silver Ike dollars in stock if you ask for them.
None of the Eisenhower dollar coins struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint with "S" mintmarks are 40% silver and have premiums
None of the 1973 issue Eisenhower dollars were released for circulation. But more information is needed such as mintmarks (if any) and if the coin is proof or uncirculated, clad or 40% silver. Please post new question.
Eisenhower silver dollars were not well-circulated. Uncirculated coins from 1971 are worth a few times their original value whereas worn, circulated coins are worth only a few cents more than their original value.
The coin has 40% silver in it or .3161oz of pure silver.
All 1971 & 1972 Eisenhower "S" mintmark dollars are 40% silver. The value is about $12.00.
None of the Eisenhower dollars regardless of date or mintmark struck for general circulation have any silver or are more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums