Gold-plated but not gold. All 1972 halves were made of copper-nickel and are only worth 50 cents in circulated condition.
It's only gold plated. It's worth around $4 and maybe a few cents extra for the gold plating.
how much is a 1 gold dollar liberty 1972
50 cents. It's not gold, it's just plated. There have NEVER been any gold Kennedy halves - or any other design, for that matter. For one thing, if there were they'd be worth hundreds of bucks and even the most boneheaded government employees wouldn't circulate a gold coin for 50¢.
1311.00 us dollar
50 cents for the copper-nickel coin underneath a few atoms of gold plating. A cent or two for the plating, IF you could recover it.
It's a gold plated novelty coin that just a dollar plus the 3 cents worth of gold
It is only gold plated which adds no extra value. Since it is a gold plated coin it is considered altered and is worth face value.
The 1972 Eisenhower dollar has no silver in it and the gold plating don't do nothing for the value but it's still a dollar
jfk kennedy coin july 1963 half dollar is priceless
The U.S. Mint has never made a "Memorial" Kennedy half dollar. Many different society's have counter stamped & gold plated Kennedy half dollars an sold them as "Memorial" coins. The coins are considered altered and have no numismatic value.
It's only gold plated. It's worth around $4 and maybe a few cents extra for the gold plating.
The gold plating adds nothing to the value of the coin and has no collectible value at all unless you find someone who wants it.
Sorry no US one dollar GOLD coins dated 1972. A 1972 one dollar coin is a Eisenhower dollar. None were struck in gold. Many have been privately plated with small amounts of gold and sold as collectibles but are actually only worth a dollar.
The Mint does NOT make gold half dollars. The coin has been gold plated. Gold plated Kennedy halves are only face value.
There's no such coin. If you have a large (38 mm) coin with a picture of President Eisenhower on the front, it's an ordinary copper-nickel dollar that was plated with a tiny amount of gold, and has no extra value except as a curiosity.
$1. It's gold-plated, not gold. The U.S. didn't strike any gold coins in 1972 but a lot of private companies took normal copper-nickel dollars, plated them, and sold them as "collectibles" at significant markups.
In 1968 the Kennedy half dollars were still struck in 40% silver so it has the silver value only, about $2.50. The gold plating was NOT done at the Mint and adds nothing to the value.