All of them... except if when you add their values together it makes 100 or more
1 penny is worth 1/100 or a hundredth of a dollar. there are 100 pennies in a dollar. so a penny is a fraction of 1 dollar.
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5 kroner converts to a dollar
One dollar = 100 cents. That's 20 nickels (5 cent coins) per dollar. 20 x 10 = 200
It's right in the name "Half-dollar" half of a dollar is 50 cents.
62 copper dollar coins
It depends what you are referring to. If you are meaning dollar coins minted after 1935 (such as the Eisenhower Dollar, Susan B. Anthony Dollar, Presidential Dollar and Sacajawea Dollar) or if you are meaning dollar coins minted before 1936 (Morgan Dollar, Peace Dollar, Seated Liberty Dollar). If you mean dollar coins minted after 1935, the answer is only a dollar. None of them have any precious metals in them that would cause them to increase in value, none of them are struck in low enough quantities to have collector demand and have no potential of increasing in value. Dollar coins minted before 1936 however, have already shown a large increase in value, for example, a Peace Dollar is worth $22 in silver content alone! That isn't even figuring in if it is a rare date or in pristine condition. It is worth about 22 times its face value, whereas a 1971 Eisenhower dollar in circulated condition is only worth... $1 40 years later. So if you have dollar coins before 1936, the sky is the limit on how much they can increase both in collector demand (there are many old dollar coins with a very limited mintage that are worth hundreds or thousands of dollars to a coin collector) or increase in silver prices.
1 penny is worth 1/100 or a hundredth of a dollar. there are 100 pennies in a dollar. so a penny is a fraction of 1 dollar.
They are worth one dollar. If you decide to collect them, do so for your own enjoyment--there are so many that it is doubtful that the value will increase as a collectable.
It depends what you are referring to. If you are meaning dollar coins minted after 1935 (such as the Eisenhower Dollar, Susan B. Anthony Dollar, Presidential Dollar and Sacajawea Dollar) or if you are meaning dollar coins minted before 1936 (Morgan Dollar, Peace Dollar, Seated Liberty Dollar). If you mean dollar coins minted after 1935, the answer is only a dollar. None of them have any precious metals in them that would cause them to increase in value, none of them are struck in low enough quantities to have collector demand and have no potential of increasing in value. Dollar coins minted before 1936 however, have already shown a large increase in value, for example, a Peace Dollar is worth $22 in silver content alone! That isn't even figuring in if it is a rare date or in pristine condition. It is worth about 22 times its face value, whereas a 1971 Eisenhower dollar in circulated condition is only worth... $1 40 years later. So if you have dollar coins before 1936, the sky is the limit on how much they can increase both in collector demand (there are many old dollar coins with a very limited mintage that are worth hundreds or thousands of dollars to a coin collector) or increase in silver prices.
So many were made that most coins are only valued for the silver (40%) at about $3.00.
So many were made that most coins are only valued for the silver at about $2.70
The new presidential gold dollar coins are not made of Gold so they are only worth one dollar. The mint has made so many errors on the edge of the coins that it does not increase the value of the coin more than one dollar.
Many of the Walking Liberty half dollar coins are worth a price ranging between $10 and $20. The price will vary depending upon the coins condition.
Because of the many known varieties of early U.S. dollar coins, authentication is recommended. With 6 major variety's of the 1799 dollar, retail values run from $1,000.00 to over $18,000.00 for genuine circulated coins depending on the grade.
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