yeah, it is 15-20$ for one pound of gold, so a gold plating wouldn’t be worth any more. You could sell it for more if someone out there wants it, I and others collect gold plated coins. So you can try selling it anyway for a reasonable price.
The coin is gold plated, not made from gold and has no numismatic value at all. It's just a quarter.
Unfortunately, being colored makes it considered by collectors to be damaged goods -- no value.
It might be worth a buck as a novelty thing.
The gold plating adds nothing to the value of the coin, which was just a quarter to start with. The value is only what someone that wants it will pay.
25 cents.
The Mint has never made gold quarters. If you have a gold quarter then it has been plated which destroys the numismatic value of the coin. Its value is 25 cents plus the value of the little bit of gold they used to plate it. Some chemicals can cause the quarter to turn different colors. This also does not enhance the value of the coin.
July 24, 2009 Gold plating a coin destroys its numismatic value. The Bicentennial quarter is worth but a quarter plus the value of the bit of gold used to plate it.
A Quarter Krugerrand is worth about $300.
The Pennsylvania state quarter was struck in 1999
Gold-plated but not gold. For one thing, a gold quarter would be worth hundreds of dollars so it would be foolish for them to be put in circulation. The gold adds nothing to the coin's worth and would in fact cost more than its value to remove.
25 cents if the quarter was made in 1965 or later. Gold plating really adds nothing to the value of a coin and is considered to be damage to a collector. While interesting, the amount of gold used in gold plating is too small to be stripped off and sold and make a profit. However, if the quarter is dated 1964 or earlier, it is a 90% silver quarter and is worth about $6.25 for the silver content in the quarter, but the gold adds nothing to the value.
Twenty five cents.
A 2008 gold plated quarter only has value to someone who wants it. The plating does not add to the value of the coin in any way at all. But it's still 25 cents.
Gold plated coins are novelty coins with no collectible value and are not made by the US Mint.
The gold plating adds nothing to the value of 25 cents, unless you find someone that wants it, it's a quarter.
It may have been plated with gold but it adds nothing to the value of the coin.
It's just a state quarter that has been gold plated and it has no collectible value at all, unless you find someone that wants it.