No gold 1 cent coins have ever been struck by the US Mint. It may have been plated with copper or even gold but it has no numismatic value at all. It's 1 cent unless you find someone that wants it.
The U.S. Mint has never gold plated any of their coins. Yours is probably the product of a private mint and while some may collect such things, it has no numismatic value. Even if it is a coin issued by the U.S. Mint and then plated by someone else, it's value is limited to the value of the metals used to produce it.
Check the date again and post a new question.
It is called an American Eagle Silver Dollar and is worth about $1-$3 above the silver spot price.
The value depends on the current spot price of silver at the time of sale. It's $19.83 per ounce right now.
10 / 15 dollars
The value of a 1990 Eisenhower gold commemorative coin depends on the condition of the coin. On average the coin would be worth approximately $26.
The value of a 1990 Eisenhower gold commemorative coin depends on the condition of the coin. On average the coin would be worth approximately $26.
$89.00 American Mint.
Gold plating by itself isn't worth much, so it really depends on the metal content of the coin. Commemorative coins like that don't have much value unless it's made of a precious metal.
Do you mean the circulating dollar coin minted from 1971 to 1978, or the commemorative coin issued in 1990? The circulating coins are worth only a dollar each. The commemoratives are worth about $15.
If the dates are 1776-1976 your coin is not gold, it's gold-plated. Millions were struck in copper-nickel to honor the U.S. Bicentennial. They're only worth face value to $1.15, except for uncirculated or proof versions. The fact that your coin is plated makes it an altered coin with no extra value, unfortunately.
$1000
$6.00
The Royal Mint did not produce a 1965 rhodium plated 24 carat gold Churchill Commemorative coin. Any such coin would most likely have been privately minted and would only achieve the value of the metals used, maybe a little more.
the 250 year commemorative coin sells for $50
20.00
The Apollo 11 commemorative coin is readily available with little demand for it. Therefore it is only worth between $1-$5 but as with any collector item it is worth what someone is willing to pay for it.