It depends on which coin it is. Half Penny, penny, threepence, shilling, sixpence...they all have different values.
You can sell it at coin shops, flea markets or to collectors you may know. There are other options of selling but unless it is uncirculated there would not be much money left for you.
$22 to $17,000 depending upon the condition of the coin.
modern money is divisible. the penny, which is the smallest denomination of coin is small enough for almost any purchase
Depends on the condition. Is it a double struck coin? The date on some of these cents was minted in error and it "appears twice" on the coin. That penny is worth some money. Anything else is worth less than a buck. Usually a lot less. Even the uncirculated1955 D cent is selling for less than a buck.
It depends on which coin it is. Half Penny, penny, threepence, shilling, sixpence...they all have different values.
$22 to $17,000 depending upon the condition of the coin.
You can sell it at coin shops, flea markets or to collectors you may know. There are other options of selling but unless it is uncirculated there would not be much money left for you.
A penny is a unit if currency (money), thus one penny means one unit/coin of this currency (1p).
I suggest not, otherwise it would be documented in coin catalogues. The Australian 1920 "no dot" Penny is considered to be rare at any time. On a scale of 1 to 10, it is rated at a 7. If you have an Australian 1920 "no dot" Penny with a genuine minting flaw, wrap it up very carefully and take it to a reputable coin dealer for authentication and valuation.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1920 Lincoln cent is a high mintage, common date coin. Retail values for average circulated coins are less than $2.00.
Such a coin does not exist. All British Pennies have been minted at the Royal Mint since 1920.
$22 to $17,000 depending upon the condition of the coin.
first of all i dont know second, i want to ask this question: How would you know it is a 1920 mercury dime if the obverse was a penny? It sounds like you have a magician's coin made by cutting apart both a dime and a penny, and hollowing out one side of the penny so the dime side snaps into the penny side. It's interesting but has no value to a coin collector.
Please post a new question with the coin's date and country of issue. If there's no country on it, a one penny coin is most likely from Great Britain.
Both coin an bills were used.
Are you buying it or selling it? Expect to pay about $3 from an authentic coin dealer. If you are selling it to the dealer, you will be very lucky if you are offered $2.