Canada didn't strike nickels until 1922. Before that the coins were made of silver like the old US half-dime coin, and were simply called 5 cent pieces.
Please see the Related Question for more information.
It's a silver 5¢ coin similar to the old US half-dime, rather than a nickel. Retail values range from $5 or so if very worn, up to $70 if almost uncirculated.
That nickel is the "Isolation of Nickel Bicentennial" issue. Average, used quality about 20 cents. In mint condition it's worth about $2
a nickel that says 1751-1951 and has maple leafs on one side? what is it worth?
a Nickel!
NO
Five cents
Canadian money does not actually have a nickel. They have what is called a five cent piece. A 2002 Canadian 5¢ piece is only worth face value.
Its face value is 5 cents, but the melt value of a 1955-1981 Canadian nickel is $0.09 so the melt value is 4 cents more than the face value of the coin5 cents. It's not rare, and many are still in circulation.
They're both only worth face value.
Canadian nickels (1922 and later) never contained silver. A 1967 Centennial nickel is made of 99.9% nickel and is worth about 15 cents in above-average condition.
If it's been in circulation, maybe face value to 10 cents.
That's a Canadian centennial nickel from 1967. It's currently worth about 7 cents for the metal content.
It's still worth five cents in Canada.
its worth bout a 1.50
Ten cents. It's made of nickel, not silver.
the big nickel is about 64,607,747 times the size of a Canadian nickel