.22 cents us
What is the value of a Gutschein 50 pfhennig note
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.
Unless it's uncirculated, about 30¢ (face value)
50 to 75 cents, assuming average wear.
That is the mintmark of the Munich mint on this German 50 pfennig.
A 1972 Kennedy half dollar contains no silver and is worth 50 cents.
One-half of a U.S. cent. Before the euro was adopted Germany's currency unit was the mark. One mark = 100 pfennige (that's the plural of "pfennig"). At its last valuation in 2002 the mark was worth about 50 cents (U.S.) so a pfennig was pretty far down on the scale.
The coin is face value.
1¢. At the time it was replaced by the euro (2002) the Deutschmark was worth about 50¢ U.S.
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
Unless it's uncirculated, this coin (10 pfennige, rather than a pfennig with a 10) is only worth face value, about 5 cents. It was a common circulation coin until the euro was adopted in 2002.