There were no dollar coins minted in the U.S. in 1986.
If you're referring to trade silver dollars no such date exist . They were minted from 1873 to 1885
Hi I have also been trying to find the value of these coins because I have a 1986 Liberty Trade Silver coin. Ive done the research and these coins were privately manufactured so they are really only worth the silver value of these coins, and the print on them does not contribute at all to their value.
The coin has no silver and is just face value, spend it.
Trade dollars were US coins made in silver to trade in the far East. However, your coin, if it is an 1884 Trade Dollar, it is counterfeit. There were only 10 examples minted that year, all of them are known. So, when it comes to value, the only value your coin can have is if it is minted in real silver, if it is minted in real silver, it is worth however much silver is in your coin. If it is silver plated lead, or silver plated copper, or non-silver alloy like "nickel silver" your coin is essentially worthless.
No coin exists. Silver eagles would not be minted until 1986.
It is a bullion coin minted by a private mint. It's value is determined mostly by market price for silver.
This is not a U.S. Mint issued coin. It's a privately made 1 ounce silver bullion round that has no numismatic value. The value is only for the silver, about $20.00.
29.00
This depends on if it is a Morgan or Trade dollar.
The value of it depends on the price of silver, at the time of writing on November 21st 2010, the value of it would be $27.33, but that value will increase or decrease as the price of silver changes.
The coin is actually a "Statue of Liberty Centennial" silver dollar and is very common with a current retail value of $26.00.
The value of a silver coin is always changing because the value of silver is always changing. See the related link below for a silver coin value calculator. This does not give the actual value of the coin but it does give the value of the metal used to make the coin. This is know as the melt value.
Please post a new, separate question with enough details to ID the coin including its denomination and country of origin.