Current average retail value is $28.00. Issue price was $2.10.
Current average retail value is $28.00. Issue price was $2.10.
The 1983 United States Proof Set includes the Lincoln penny, Jefferson nickel, Roosevelt dime, Washington quarter, and the Kennedy half dollar. Most of the sets are worth a price ranging between $5 and $10.
There aren't 112 proof state quarters. There are only 50 proof state quarters, (along with 6 in the DC/US territories). Unless you are meaning you had both the clad (copper-nickel, common) proofs and the silver proof sets. But just about every clad US proof state quarter is worth about $1 or so, silver proof quarters go for about $7-8 or about fifty cents or a dollar above melt value individually.
Well, you have got to tell what is in the proof set. Say that it was a nickel, dime,half dollar, and silver dollar, I'd say about $15, but $14 dollars of it from the silver dollar...~Kyle Michel~Very Experienced Coin Collector~VERY INCORRECT1977 Proof Sets were only issued in cupro-nickel clad composition. They don't contain any precious-metal coins. As of 01/2015 retail prices are in the $9 to $10 range.
About $2.00 for average proof coins
Current average retail value is $28.00. Issue price was $2.10.
contains 1 dollar, half dollar,dime, nickel, and penny
A proof what? Cent, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, or dollar? I'm hoping to get $8 or $9 for a whole set at an auction this weekend.
The set has all 5 State quarters a Sacagawea dollar and the half, dime, nickel and penny.
You didn't say whether you have individual coins, an uncirculated set, or a proof set. If it's separate coins, as of 12/2008 the values are: Half: $8.40 Quarter: $3.75 Dime: $1.75 Nickel: $0.20 Cent: $0.05 If it's an uncirculated set, the value of the full package is about $15 for a set from either Mint, Philadelphia or Denver. If it's a proof set, $18.
The 1983 United States Proof Set includes the Lincoln penny, Jefferson nickel, Roosevelt dime, Washington quarter, and the Kennedy half dollar. Most of the sets are worth a price ranging between $5 and $10.
Because you have a 1975 proof set. Congress decided we should have a year's warning that the bicentennial was coming up and authorized the bicentennial designs ahead of time.
No US gold coins were minted in 1975. Proof sets contained only the standard circulating coins of the time: A 1975 dated cent, nickel, and dime, and a dual-dated 1776-1976 Bicentennial quarter, half dollar, and dollar.
A 1776-1976 no proof quarter dollar worth in 2012
Twenty-five cents. (Unless it is a proof coin.)
August 5, 2009 There were 2 different 1976 proof sets. One contained 6 coins, cent, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar and dollar coin. The other set is called the Bicentennial Proof Set and contains only the bicentennial quarter, half dollar and dollar coin.There were approximately 4 million of each set sold. The 6 coin set sold for $7 new and is valued at $15 today. The 3 coin set sold for $15 new and is valued at $20 today.
If you found it in change, it's 25 cents. The retail value of a single proof is about a dollar.