If you found it in change, 5 cents. Almost a billion were minted and loads of them were saved when new. Even a nice uncirculated one only sells for around a quarter.5 cents, it is not a rare coin in the least.The letter E appears several times on the 2005 nickel, but its not a mintmark those are only a P or D and are under the date. The coin is just 5 cents.there is nothing special about a 2005 buffalo nickel. so it is worth its face value of 5 cents
...25 cents. Quarters dated 1965 and later contain no precious metals and unless they were in a special mint set, they are only worth face value.
A 1989 U.S. nickel is worth five cents. However there is no "C" mint mark on any current US coin - only P or D.
== == Unless it's uncirculated or there's something that makes it different from the hundreds of millions of other 1989 nickels that are still circulating, it's only worth 5 cents. 1989-P Uncirculated...........$0.85 1989-D Uncirculated...........$1.00 1989-S Proof......................$1.50 1989-S Choice Proof...........$11.00
p2 - 25 = (p - 5)(p + 5)
15 gold coins
No Nickels were struck in silver after 1945, the value is 5 cents.
Unless it's silver it's worth 10 cents. D and P mintmarks are not silver.
This sounds like an old trade token -- face value 5 cents -- collector value $5 to $10
It is in common circulation, it has no precious metal content and is worth 5 cents.
Please check your pocket change. The Philadelphia mint produced about 1.37 BILLION dimes in 2001 so they're not scarce, rare, or valuable (other than 10 cents, of course).
50 cents, it is in common circulation.
five cents in the pound
about 3 to 6 cents depending on condition.
It's still worth exactly 10 cents.
As of 2014 the estimated value of a 1988 P dime in the U.S. is 22 cents. The value of coins does fluctuate by demand and the market.
If 5*(p + 6) = 25 then p is -1