Sacajawea dollars aren't gold and they aren't plated. They're made of a metal called manganese brass, and the outer layers are mechanically bonded to a copper core.
About a billion Sacajawea dollars were made in 2000 so unless your coin is either a proof or uncirculated one, it's still only worth $1.
It's not gold plated the Brass in the coin gives it that color and it's not worth more than a dollar
Presidential dollars were first issued in 2007. You have a Sacajawea dollar. The golden color on the outside isn't gold. So it's only worth a dollar. If it was plated in real gold it's still only worth a dollar. Gold plating adds no value to coins. In fact it actually decreases the value in some.
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.
First it's gold plated, but not by the mint. And it's a common Eisenhower dollar and value is what ever you can get.
It's made of brass, not gold plated, and it's only worth face value in circulated condition.
It's a gold plated novelty coin that just a dollar plus the 3 cents worth of gold
Not gold and not plated. It's made of manganese brass. (And yes, it's worth something: it's worth one dollar.)
The U.S. half dollar has never been made of gold. What you probably have is a gold-plated 1979 half-dollar. It's not really worth much above face value.
The U.S. Mint did not produce any gold dollars for the bicentennial. There are aftermarket examples of gold plated dollars but they are just regular production coins which have been gold plated. They have no added numismatic value and their actual value is limited to the value of the metals in them .
The Mint does NOT make gold half dollars. The coin has been gold plated. Gold plated Kennedy halves are only 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
There's no such thing as a gold silver dollar. Dollar coins were made of gold (1854-1889) or silver (1794-1935) but the 2 metals were never mixed. Most likely you have a silver dollar coin that was plated. Unfortunately being plated reduces its value to that of the raw metal in it, about $10 as of 06/2009.