Yes to anyone who would want to buy it. You can also sell it from newspaper classifieds to eBay and Craigslist. also a coin dealer or maybe a jewler would buy it.
Ebay can be a good place to sell coins. If you don't want to do that take it to a coin collector.
If you are talking about a US coin, you have to go to the US mint website to buy silver coins. Banks don't sell silver coins. They don't distribute them either.
As of 01/2010, these coins sell for about $15.00
You would find out the weight of the coin, find the silver prices and the composition of the coin and mathematically figure it out. However, sites like Coinflation will do that for you for all US and Canadian coins.
Coins struck for circulation in the US today have no silver in them.
US coins are worth more than Canadian coins. If you pay in US currency in Canada, the vendor makes money. If American vendors allowed the reverse, they'd lose money.
No, Canadian coins are not generally accepted as legal tender in the United States.
Yes, Canadian coins are generally not accepted for use in the United States. While some businesses near the Canadian border may accept them, they are not considered legal tender in the US. It is recommended to exchange Canadian coins for US currency before traveling to the US.
The best source for silver content and to calculate coin precious metal prices is www.coinflation.com If you have bulk coin to would like to sell for US funds, please visit www.canadiancoinexchange.com.
According to the Canadian Counsel they encourage the use of Canadian coin as well as US coins. The use of US coins makes no sense because it holds no value in Canada.
None. It's pure nickel. Canada hung onto silver in its coins a bit longer than the US but stopped by mid-1968.
1837 was the year US silver coins changed to .900 silver & .100 copper, that caused a slight reduction of silver.