It's not gold, just gold-plated.
Private companies take ordinary quarters, plate them with a thin layer of gold, and sell them as "collectibles" at a significant markup. They're interesting curiosities but don't have any special value to coin collectors.
A quarter from 2006 would still be worth 25 cents.
25 cents
Not much about 25 cents worth it's plated.
25 cents. It's gold-plated but not gold. It's an ordinary quarter that was plated with a tiny amount of gold and sold as a "collectible". If you think about it for a few seconds, a circulating gold quarter would be worth hundreds of dollars given the current price of the metal. Not even the densest bureaucrat would authorize a coin worth that much and put it into circulation for 25 cents.
July 24, 2009 Gold plating a coin destroys its numismatic value. The Bicentennial quarter is worth but a quarter plus the value of the bit of gold used to plate it.
About $2
It's a novelty item worth couple of cents for the gold plating plus whatever the underlying quarter is worth. If the quarter is copper-nickel, then it's only worth a quarter. If it's a special silver "prestige" quarter made in San Francisco it's at least worth maybe $3.50 for its metal content.
It is only worth 25 cents and in no longer spendable.
Please rephrase question.
1867 is the year Nebraska became a state. The Nebraska quarter was minted in 2006 and is worth exactly 25 cents.
A 1965 U.S. quarter is worth 25 cents. With gold at a current price of $1,429 per ounce, 25 cents' worth is 0.000175 ounces. If that wasn't your question, rephrase and try again.
A 1965 U.S. quarter is worth 25 cents. With gold at a current price of $1,429 per ounce, 25 cents' worth is 0.000175 ounces. If that wasn't your question, rephrase and try again.