It's a Euro cent. The serif on the "E" makes it look like "Buro." The currrent value can be determined using any bank's currency calculator
Five dollars
One cent. The U.S. does not make gold pennies. Your coin has either been plated for use in jewelry, or the copper coating has reacted a bit with the zinc core. The latter can cause a goldish tint. Gold currently sells for about $1000 an ounce. A cent weighs around 1/12 of an ounce so a penny made of gold would contain about $80 worth of gold, not a sensible way to make that coin. Alternately, one cent's worth of gold would result in a coin so small you'd need a magnifying glass to see it, LOL!
its worth a lot of money,
because gold is a rare color
GOLD is much more better because It's worth more and silver is not
One cent coins were never made of gold.
Being gold plated removes its numismatic value. The coin is worth 50 cents and the plating less than one cent.
2 dollar and fifty cent
covering it with 1 oz of gold
Five dollars
The coin (assuming it is a US coin) is only worth 1 cent. Either the coin was chemically treated to make it look gold or it was gold plated. Either way, it is not worth any more than one cent.
If the coin is a Lincoln cent dated 1964 it may look like gold or have been gold plated but the US Mint has never made a gold one cent coin.
First off, Euros weren't minted until 2002, secondly the 10 cent Euro is in common circulation, isn't gold and is worth simply 10 Euro cents.
Gold right now is at $1063 per ounce so that makes one US dollar worth about one 10th of a cent.
That coin is still legal tender in Ireland, so it is just worth ten cent.
It was then worth $16 because of inflation.
The U.S. has never made a gold one cent coin. Post a new question with a date.