One hundred dollars
America itself have a ton of gold locked up a dollar bill is not a dollar but a paper note (like a IOU) lets say if you added up all the US bill in the world together and have a made up number of 50 trillion dollar and if US has 50 trillion pound of gold than your dollor bill would be worth exactly 1 pound of gold in the vault, BUT you cannot go and take the gold out. on the back of the dollar bill it says "In God We Trust" which means that you trust God that America will safe keep your portion of the gold, the meaning of it is not exact but it reference to it. It also has other meaning such as God has favored the US. if more bills get printed the weaker the dollar bill gets and the more gold US has the stronger the dollar bill gets. Gold is the universal currency
A gold-plated hundred dollar bill is not considered legal tender. While the bill itself is legal currency, the addition of gold plating alters its original form and could lead to it being treated as a novelty item rather than official currency. To be legal tender, it must remain in its original condition issued by the U.S. Treasury.
$1. It's been gold plated, not struck in gold.
One hundred dollars
It's a gold plated novelty coin that just a dollar plus the 3 cents worth of gold
Not gold and not plated. It's made of manganese brass. (And yes, it's worth something: it's worth one dollar.)
It's not gold plated the Brass in the coin gives it that color and it's not worth more than a dollar
It is only gold plated which adds no extra value. Since it is a gold plated coin it is considered altered and is worth face value.
The Mint does NOT make gold half dollars. The coin has been gold plated. Gold plated Kennedy halves are only face value.
The small 13mm to 15mm diameter US gold $1 coins made from 1849-1889 are not gold plated. They are 90% gold & 10% silver.
It's made of brass, not gold plated, and it's only worth face value in circulated condition.