There is no magic five words to say to the Federal Bank to obtain silver coins. You could ask ÒDo you have silver coins?Ó. Though the Federal Bank has ceased redeeming Federal notes in silver.
If you are talking about a US coin, you have to go to the US mint website to buy silver coins. Banks don't sell silver coins. They don't distribute them either.
Some banks do sell American Silver Eagles, but they do not hold and sell silver coins that are turned in.
At a bank, any coin will be worth the face value. In other words, 50 cents. However, SOME 50 cent US coins contain some silver. Their value would be to a coin dealer, or someone that buys silver. THAT value will depend of the year of the coin, and it's condition.
There are no magic words to get free silver anywhere. What you can do is request rolls of dimes, quarters, or half dollars, and hope to find an old silver coin in the mix. That said, nearly all silver coins have long since been pulled from circulation, so the odds of finding one in a bank roll is minimal.
What foreign coins can you take to the bank and cash in
If you are talking about a US coin, you have to go to the US mint website to buy silver coins. Banks don't sell silver coins. They don't distribute them either.
minting coins
Jail likely federal
False ! - :)
There are no magic words to get free silver anywhere. What you can do is request rolls of dimes, quarters, or half dollars, and hope to find an old silver coin in the mix. That said, nearly all silver coins have long since been pulled from circulation, so the odds of finding one in a bank roll is minimal.
Some banks do sell American Silver Eagles, but they do not hold and sell silver coins that are turned in.
At a bank, any coin will be worth the face value. In other words, 50 cents. However, SOME 50 cent US coins contain some silver. Their value would be to a coin dealer, or someone that buys silver. THAT value will depend of the year of the coin, and it's condition.
If you local bank will not exchange them, you must take the coins to a Federal Reserve Bank. If your coins are broken or otherwise not whole, the only place you can redeem them is at the United States Mint in Philadelphia.
if you have ac coins you can buy bank spaces to valencia
There's no such loophole. The U.S. mint stopped producing silver coinage for circulation in 1965 (1969 for half dollars). The vast majority of such coins has long since been pulled from circulation. You can request rolls of dimes, quarters, and half dollars at any bank, but it's highly unlikely that you'd find any silver.
There are no magic words to get free silver anywhere. What you can do is request rolls of dimes, quarters, or half dollars, and hope to find an old silver coin in the mix. That said, nearly all silver coins have long since been pulled from circulation, so the odds of finding one in a bank roll is minimal.
Please see the question "What is the value of an 1899 US 2 dollar silver certificate?"The Federal Reserve System wasn't established until 1914.Silver certificates were issued directly by the Treasury and weren't connected to the Federal Reserve Bank.