Without knowing the coin's denomination, there's no one specific answer. That said, U.S. coins dated before 1965 have the mint mark somewhere on the reverse (tails) side, except for the Lincoln cent and the Standing Liberty quarter. If it's 1968 or later, all mint marks are on the obverse (heads) side.
The mint letter on a coin, if any, is located right under the date.
Mintmarks identify which mint the coin was made at.
The letter is known as the mint-mark and tells where the coin was made. A coin having a P mint-mark (or no mint-mark on some coins) was made in Philadelphia, a coin having an S Mint-mark was minted in San Fransisco, a coin with a D mint-mark was minted in Denver.
if its does not have a mint stamp it was minted in philly
A mint mark is a smaller letter or letters representing the mint facility the coin was struck and are found in various places on the coin.
It depends on the type of coin the date and denomination on were the mint mark is located
A mint-mark on a coin is a letter designating the location of the mint where the coin was made. "D" for Denver, "P" for Philadelphia, "S" for San Francisco.
Mint mark locations depend on the date and type of coin.
It is a tiny letter, usually near the date, that signifies whihc mint the coin come from. On American coins, if there is no visible mint mark, it is from the Philadelphia mint. A "D" indicatges the Denver mint.
A mint mark is a letter or other symbol to indicate where a coin was minted.
The mint mark is located on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the wreath. If there is no mint mark then the coin was minted at the Philadelphia Mint.
A Denver mint coin is a coin that was produced at the United States Mint facility located in Denver, Colorado. Coins minted at this location typically have a "D" mintmark to indicate their origin.