If such a coin existed it would be spectacularly valuable, but all 1964 nickels - in fact, all US nickels made since 1938 - carry a picture of Thomas Jefferson. Abraham Lincoln has been on the cent since 1909.
In any case 1964-dated nickels are very common. Any found in pocket change are generally only worth face value.
The value is 5 cents and it has no silver in it.
OK, it's not Lincoln, he is only on the penny. With a date of 1903 it's a Liberty Head nickel an has a value of $3.00-$5.00 in circulated condition
The coins are still found in circulation and are face value only.
Check that coin again. The last year for the Indian head nickel was 1938.
A 1964 Lincoln 1 cent coin is so very common unless it's brilliant uncirculated (MS-65) spend it.
The value is 5 cents and it has no silver in it.
There's no such coin. Lincoln is on the penny.
OK, it's not Lincoln, he is only on the penny. With a date of 1903 it's a Liberty Head nickel an has a value of $3.00-$5.00 in circulated condition
The coins are still found in circulation and are face value only.
Check that coin again. The last year for the Indian head nickel was 1938.
It may be a little older but is very common, just face value.
The melt value of something is the value of the metal itself. For example, a 1964 nickel has a melt value of 5 cents because 1.8 cents worth of nickel and 2.7 cents of copper.
There is no silver in a 1964 nickel.
A 1964 Lincoln 1 cent coin is so very common unless it's brilliant uncirculated (MS-65) spend it.
The melt value for a 1964 nickel is the same as any other date of nickels (except 1942-45), because unlike the dime and quarter, nickels weren't silver, and there was no change to it in 1965. As of 19 August 2013, U.S. nickels have a melt value of 4.6 cents.
The coin is a common date Lincoln, still in circulation and only face value.
The 1964 Jefferson nickel is still in circulation.More than 1 BILLION were made. So if it has any wear at all, just spend it.