It is worth nothing. The Germans no long use the mark, but are on the Euro. When it was used a 50 pfennig was about 5 cents. One pfennig was a penny.
That is the mintmark of the Munich mint on this German 50 pfennig.
The coin you're referring to is the 50 Pfennig piece. The obverse has the number 50 printed in the centre and the words Bundesrepublik Deutschland - Pfennig around the outside. The J immediately underneath the 50 indicates where the coin was minted, in this case Hamburg. The following letters denoted the various German mints: A - Berlin D - Munich F - Stuttgart G - Karlsruhe J - Hamburg
Us $50 :-d
they are worth 50 cents.
25 cents depending on if it is in mint condition
If the coin is a brilliant uncirculated example it may be worth 25 cents.
I assume the denomination is one pfennig and not something else; pfennig is the equivalent of penny so it appeared on all denominations less than 1 mark. Your coin's value depends very much on its mint mark. Retail prices as of 10/2008 A : $2 - $6 depending on condition D : $3.50 - $14 E,F : $14 - $35 G : $35 - $100 J : $22 - $50
60 D
50 cents.
The 50 pf denomination was moderately common in Germany until 2002 when the euro was adopted. sammler.com, a major German collectibles site, lists the following approximate retail values as of 02/2012:"D" mint mark (München [Munich]):Almost no wear - US$8.10Uncirculated - US$13.50"F" (Stuttgart):Almost no wear - $8.10Uncirculated - $13.50"G" (Karlsruhe):Almost no wear - $8.10Uncirculated - $17.60"J" (Hamburg):Slightly worn - $10.80Almost no wear - $24.30Uncirculated - $33.80
50-100 USD