25 cents, all circulation quarters from 1965 to date are made of copper-nickel,
The coin is face value.
No U.S. coins dated 1966 have a mint mark. The '66 quarter is worth 25 cents.
The value is currently around 4 cents.
If you mean a 1966 American quarter, then none.
Around $5.88 for its silver content. These were made in large quantities and therefore are only worth their metal value.
The coin is face value.
25 cents.
No U.S. coins dated 1966 have a mint mark. The '66 quarter is worth 25 cents.
On eBay they're sold for $2.
The value is currently around 4 cents.
There were no S-mint quarters struck from 1955 to 1967 inclusive and no US coins carried mint marks during the transition from silver to clad coinage in 1965-67.
25 cents. It contains no silver and is only face value. Millions are still in circulation.
If you mean a 1966 American quarter, then none.
Zero. A 1966 U.S. quarter is 0% silver.
Maybe you could eat a quarter-pounder, but please do not eat a quarter coin. Metal has no food value and may get stuck someplace in your digestive tract. So the answer is no.
The melt value, which only takes into account the coin's metal content and not its collector value, is currently about $5.
Around $5.88 for its silver content. These were made in large quantities and therefore are only worth their metal value.