Millions of these were made. If you found it in pocket change it is worth face value. If it has the mintmark S it is worth around $2.00.
It's not a ship, but rather a river craft called a keelboat. The coins were struck as part of the Lewis and Clark bicentennial. If you found your 2004 nickel in circulation, it's worth five cents.
It's called a keelboat rather than a sailboat. Unless you have the coin in a proof set, it's a circulation piece worth only its face value.
a 2004 nickel has nothing special about it. so it is worth its face value of 5 cents
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
If you found it in change, it's only worth face value. A nice uncirculated one might retail for 25 to 50 cents. Hundreds of millions of commemorative nickels were minted for the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial, and huge numbers were saved almost as soon as they entered circulation.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
Unless it's an uncirculated or proof coin, it's worth 5¢. The "ship" is actually a keelboat. The coin is a 2004 Jefferson Nickel from the Westward Journey of Lewis and Clark series, and hundreds of millions were minted.
A Louisiana Purchase 2004 nickel is a common nickel and is worth face value, which is 5 cents.
It's just a 2004 Peace Medal nickel spend it.
About as rare as beach sand, to be honest. They don't turn up in change very often because people scooped them up as keepsakes almost as soon as they entered circulation, but mintages were very high: 2004 P Peace . . . . 361,440,000 2004 D Peace . . . . 372,000,000 2004 P Keelboat . . 366,720,000 2004 D Keelboat . . 344,880,000 2005 P Bison . . . . 448,320,000 2005 D Bison . . . . 487,680,000 2005 P Ocean . . . . 394,080,000 2005 D Ocean . . . . 411,120,000
A 2004 nickel is worth 5 cents. A gold-plated '04 nickel is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. There is no standard market value for modified coins like that.
The back of ALL U.S. coins is upside-down in relation to the front. Your 2004 nickel is worth 5 cents.