One dollar unless it has the mintmark "S" underneath the date.
Most are just a dollar, if their still in the package from the mint a $1.25 to $2.00. If you got in pocket change spend it.
1 : $2 bills are not silver, they're paper. 2 : Bills are printed, not minted. 3 : No $2 bills of any kind were printed in 2000. So what DO you have? Any $2 bill dated 1963 or later is worth face value only.
$1 if it is a Sacajawea Dollar, the coins aren't actually gold but rather an alloy of copper and brass making them be worth simply $1. The value of the actual materials inside the coin is around 6 cents. They aren't rare and hold no special collector value.
ALL U.S. coins carry that motto so it's not useful in helping to ID a coin. The fact that you said it's a 1.00 coin means it's a Sacagawea dollar, however. Over a billion were minted for circulation and they're all worth $1 each.
This is not a coin made by the US mint. These coins generally have no collector value. If the coin is silver it will be worth more but if it is only silver plated with copper underneath it will be worth less.
Sacagawea silver dollar coins were not minted in 1979. The first year of issue for Sacagawea dollar coins was 2000, and they are made of a copper-nickel clad composition, not silver.
There is no such thing as a Liberty dollar coin minted in 2000. There is however the Sacajawea dollar which was minted in brass, and unless in proof condition it is only worth $1.
Dollar coins minted since 2000 are made of manganese brass. They're not gold, just "golden".
The year 2000 saw the introduction of the unpopular Sacagawea dollar coin. Being the first year of a new issue, it had the highest mintage of any year it's been around. Between Philadelphia and Denver, there were nearly 1.3 billion of them minted.
Check the date again. These coins were not made in 2000.
The Sacagawea Dollar was minted by the US Treasury from 2000 through 2008. What year of mintage did you have in mind?
That is a Sacagawea dollar, they have been minted from 2000 onwards and are worth one dollar.
These coins were released for circulation and are worth only face value.
No, unless the fakes were made during the time the coins were minted. For example: If you have a 2000 yr. old Roman coin faked today, no value. If you have a 2000 yr. old Roman coin faked 2000 yrs. ago, some value
If you're referring to the so-called "golden dollars" issued since 2000, or the earlier Susan B. Anthony dollars minted in 1979, 1980, and 1999, the answer is simple - $1. They're general circulation coins minted by the billions.
These coins were released for circulation and are worth only face value.
$1. These coins are still in circulation.