There are several factors that determine a coin's value. The first and major factor is what the coin is made out of. A coin made out of gold will almost always sell for more than another coin made out of silver or a base metal. The next factor is the age. In general, older coins sell for more than newer coins. The next factor after that is rarity, coins that were not minted in great quantity are worth more than coins with several million were minted. The next factor is condition, cleaned, damaged and corroded coins sell for less than uncleaned, mint-state coins. And then the final factor is the design, coins with unattractive designs generally sell for less than coins with attractive designs in the eyes of collectors.
It was worth more than $1,000.
It depends on what the coin is. More information is needed. Post new question.
There is nothing you can do to make a coin worth more than what it is.
Probably not much more than face value. An exceptional coin could be worth a little more.
The 1804 Silver dollar, Class I and the 2007 C$1m coin are worth more than the German Mark
No.
A coin collector would pay more than £5 for the coin, if it was uncirculated and in Mint condition, or a Proof coin. However if you were to go into a bank and exchange the coin for other currency, they would only give you the face value of £5's worth.
It depends on which denomination coin you have. A $10 coin has more gold than a $5 coin.
Defenitly. Any coin with a gold content is worth way more than face value.
Values for this coin are $1,100 to more than $7,000.00 depending on condition.
50
For a coin it is just worth the value stamped on it i.e. the value on it's face So a common coin is worth face value, but a rare coin is worth more than face value.