The coin is either gold plated or just looks gold. Either way it is not solid gold. It is only worth 5 cents.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
Gold-plated, not real gold. That makes it an altered coin with no real value to a collector.
Only 5 cents. To begin with a 1941 nickel is not rare and is worth only about 7 cents in circulated condition. They gold plating makes it useless. Now, it's not spendable and not collectible.
It's William Henry Harrison, not Jefferson, and it's worth one dollar.
It's either a novelty coin or a gold plated dime. If it's only a gold plated dime it's worth around $2.50. If it's a novelty coin it's worthless.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
A 2004 nickel is worth 5 cents. A gold-plated '04 nickel is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. There is no standard market value for modified coins like that.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
No. US nickels have never contained any gold. For one thing, even when the price of gold was much lower a gold coin the size of a US nickel would have been worth several dollars; today it would be worth hundreds.
It most likely is gold plated, gold plating adds really no value to the coin and like any other 1999 nickel, it is worth 5 cents.
It's worth five cents. Gold plating doesn't add any value.
Gold-plated, not real gold. That makes it an altered coin with no real value to a collector.
Only the value of the metals used to make it.
Thomas Jefferson is not currently, nor has he ever been, on the U.S. quarter. What you probably have is the Jefferson presidential dollar from 2007. It's worth one dollar.
It's not gold, but gold plated. It's a novelty coin that has no collectible value.
1964 is one of the most common dates for Jefferson nickels, with more than 2 billion minted. Gold-plating doesn't add any collector value because it alters the coin.
Thomas Jefferson's first appearance on a U S Coin was on a One Dollar Gold commemorative dated 1903. Jefferson's image first appeared on a regular circulation coin in 1938, the familiar Jefferson nickel. He also was featured on some 2007 Presidential $1 coins, and is of course on the $2 bill.