It's not gold, just gold-plated.
Private companies take ordinary quarters, plate them with a thin layer of gold, and sell them as "collectibles" at a significant markup. They're interesting curiosities but don't have any special value to coin collectors.
There's never been a gold quarter. What you have is a novelty piece made by putting a thin plating of gold (or a golden-colored metal) on a regular quarter.
They're sold as "collectibles" on TV shopping shows but numismatists consider them to be altered or damaged items with no extra value.
If you're lucky enough to have a plated quarter dated 1964 or earlier, you can at least sell it for the silver value of the underlying coin. If it's from 1965 or later the underlying coin is copper-nickel and is only worth face value.
25¢. Please take a look at the bottom of the reverse design. Like all state quarters released since 1999, your quarter has TWO dates. The minting date is 2002. 1803 is the year that Ohio joined the Union.
$2 bucks retail
$0.25 as a normal coin
It's only gold plated with about 3 cents worth of gold and is a novelty coin that has no collectible value. It may have some value but only to someone that wants it.
The U.S. hasn't minted gold coins since 1933. If it's a 2006 quarter, it's only gold-plated. There's no additional numismatic value, as the coin has been altered since minting.
It's either been gold plated or exposed to something that turned it to that color. In either case, it has no added value.
A quarter from 2006 would still be worth 25 cents.
25 cents
25 cents. It's gold-plated but not gold. It's an ordinary quarter that was plated with a tiny amount of gold and sold as a "collectible". If you think about it for a few seconds, a circulating gold quarter would be worth hundreds of dollars given the current price of the metal. Not even the densest bureaucrat would authorize a coin worth that much and put it into circulation for 25 cents.
Not much about 25 cents worth it's plated.
About $2
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.
It's a novelty item worth couple of cents for the gold plating plus whatever the underlying quarter is worth. If the quarter is copper-nickel, then it's only worth a quarter. If it's a special silver "prestige" quarter made in San Francisco it's at least worth maybe $3.50 for its metal content.
It is only worth 25 cents and in no longer spendable.
Please rephrase question.
1867 is the year Nebraska became a state. The Nebraska quarter was minted in 2006 and is worth exactly 25 cents.
A 1965 U.S. quarter is worth 25 cents. With gold at a current price of $1,429 per ounce, 25 cents' worth is 0.000175 ounces. If that wasn't your question, rephrase and try again.
A 1965 U.S. quarter is worth 25 cents. With gold at a current price of $1,429 per ounce, 25 cents' worth is 0.000175 ounces. If that wasn't your question, rephrase and try again.