About 50 cents. The 1971 half was the first year that it contained no silver at all, so it has little to no intrinsic value (beyond the fact that it's a 50 cent piece) and they tend to be hoarded rather than spent, so they're not really rare.
The coin has NO silver and is face value
They are still found in circulation, have no silver and are only face value
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only.
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only
The coin has NO silver and is face value
They are still found in circulation, have no silver and are only face value
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only.
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only
Kennedy Half dollars are very common, coins from 1971 to date contain no silver and are only face value.
8-14-11>>> US Kennedy half dollars made for general circulation dated 1971 to 2011 are not silver. The coin is face value.
Not silver. All circulating half dollars struck since 1971 are made of copper-nickel and are only worth 50 cents.
the value is usally a dollar
It's just a common half dollar no silver spend it
There's no such coin. JFK is on the half dollar. In 1971, President Eisenhower was on the dollar. Both coins are only worth face value if they're in circulated condition. They were only struck in copper-nickel, not silver so they have no added value.
Eisenhower was on the dollar coin from 1971 to 1978. J. F. Kennedy is on the half dollar. Whichever one you have, assuming the coin is from circulation it's only worth face value. They're made of copper-nickel, not silver, so they have no precious metal content.