The U.S. Mint did not produce any 1997 Presidential coins. You may have brass tokens from Reader's Digest magazine that are dated 1997. The tokens have no numismatic value.
None of the Presidential dollar coins made for general circulation contain any gold or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
None of the Presidential dollar coins made for general circulation contain any gold or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
Not completely. Due to the lack of popularity of the Presidential dollar coins, the US Mint has drastically reduced production, as there are over a billion of them still sitting unused in bank vaults. As of 2012, the Mint will only release limited quantities for collectors for the remainder of the series.
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Any that you get in change are only worth face value. A nice uncirculated one might retail for a couple of dollars. Remember, they're brass rather than gold.
None of the Presidential dollar coins made for general circulation contain any gold or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
None of the Presidential dollar coins made for general circulation contain any gold or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
These are not made by any US mint, and have no numismatic value. If the coins are silver and not silver plated, the value would be for the silver in the coins.
If you're referring to the modern presidential dollar coins, they're worth one dollar.
None of the Presidential dollar coins made for general circulation are worth more than face value or contain any gold. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
None they are brass.
If you are talking about the current US $1 presidential series of coins, no. Such coins are struck in brass and lots of them were minted. Other than finding an error coin, those coins will only be worth $1 for the near (and most likely far) future. If you are talking about a coin set not made by the US mint, those sets very often do not appreciate in value past the value of the metals used to strike them.
Bermuda's currency is linked to the US dollar. The coins are the same size and value as US coins and exchange one-for-one, so a Bermudan quarter is worth the same as a US quarter.
All of the business strikes of presidential dollar coins and other modern one dollar coins are worth face value only. Uncirculated ones retail for $3 to $6 depending on date.
The U.S. Mint has never made a half pound coin of any type. Take it to a jewler so it can be seen for value.
No US $1 coins were minted in 1809. If your coin is a bit larger than a quarter and has the Statue of Liberty on the back, it's a modern Presidential dollar. The minting date is on the edge. The coins are made of brass and have no extra value so feel free to spend it.
There are thousands of coins in the US, but if you mean circulation coins, there is the penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, Native American dollar, and presidential dollar.