No such coin exists. Nickels were only 35% silver on coins dated 1942-1945 that have a large mintmark over the Monticello.
The 2005 nickel with a buffalo on the reverse is worth exactly 5 cents.
The value of a 99.9 silver bar depends on the weight of it. The current spot price per ounce is $28.85.
Up until 1965 US quarters were 90% silver. Then they didn't have any silver at all. Therefore, no such US coin exists.
A 2010 U.S. nickel is worth exactly five cents.
Five cents
The 1941 nickel doesn't contain any silver, and is worth maybe 10 cents.
Most are worth about $1.00 just for the silver.
That's a silver war nickel from WWII, which contains 35% silver. It's worth about $2.
It's made of nickel, not silver, and realistically is still worth one dollar.
Sorry, no Buffalo nickels were ever struck in silver.
It depends if they are copper-nickel (post-1964) or 90% silver quarters (1964 and earlier). If they are copper-nickel, dated 1965 and earlier, they are only worth face, if they are silver, they are worth the silver content.
un-circulated ones can be worth up to $1000 Actually about $100 if it is a proof or specimen coin as these are 50 percent silver the non-proof version is 99.9 percent nickel making it less valuable. They are a nice coin and hard to come by but who ever put $1000 is a bit off
Anything minted in the 1970s is made of copper-nickel, not silver, and is only worth face value.
The Liberty nickel was not made in 1945. In 1945 there was a silver nickel and that is worth 25 cents.
50 cents. It's made of copper-nickel, not silver.
if it is silver it is Worth some money. but if it a penny or nickel it is a common date
There is no silver in a 1964 nickel.