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If you mean a replica of a 1933 $20 gold coin? it's only worth what you can get.
If you go to a Mint website, you will find the difference between Genuin & Replica. If your coin is Genuin, then is is worth about $1000.00 US dollars. If is a Replica, it is worth $1.00 US dollar.
If it is a replica, not much. The only value in replica currency is the materials it is made out of, for an example a silver seated liberty quarter replica would be worth no more than its silver content, regardless of what date it said on the coin because it is a replica.
Really nothing. The only time a replica coin is worth something is if it is made out of a precious metal like gold or silver, then it is worth the amount of that metal that is in the coin
Since it is a replica, it is only worth melt value for the bronze. Bronze isn't worth much at all. You're looking at most likely about 50 cents or less for the coin.
Yes, any coin that doesn't have the same dimensions as the real coin is a replica.
Whatever metal the coin is composed of. The vast majority are gold plated copper and are nearly worthless, worth a couple of cents at most. Although its possible you could have a gold plated silver, or indeed a solid gold coin which would be worth significantly more. But since replica coins have no standards of which to base their coins, its impossible to say what your coin is made out of, and therefore what it is worth. It has NO collector value though, the only value comes from the metal your coin is made out of, and without seeing your coin, its impossible to say.
If it's a replica, then it's only gold-plated at best, and it's only worth as much as someone is willing to pay (which won't be much).
Since it is a replica, it has absolutely no collector value. However, depending on what material the coin is made of it might have value for scrap. If the coin was made of 90% pure gold like the original, it would be worth ~1600. If such a coin was made in 90% silver, it would be worth ~$20. However, chances are your coin is made out of gold plated copper, nickel, or some other near-worthless metal and is only worth a couple of cents.
The word REPLICA is the key. That means the coin is a copy, not the real thing, and is almost certainly made of base metal with a thin plating of brass or gold. Replica coins are generally not worth more than a few dollars and have little or no interest to coin collectors. Even if it's gold-plated the amount is so small that it wouldn't be cost-effective to remove it.
not much it is a replica after all
The word COPY means simply that - your coin is a replica, not an original, so it's only worth the value of the base metal that it's made of - perhaps a dollar or two.