No. Billions of them sit in drawers and bank vaults. They also are mixed in with modern dollar coins in vending machines.
It was the dollar. The coins are in common circulation that save for rare die varieties, errors and ones in mint packaging they are only worth $1.
None of the SBA Dollar coins struck for general circulation (except the 1979-P Near Date) have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums
The value of a 1979 Susan B. Anthony dollar can vary based on its condition and whether it has any unique characteristics, such as being uncirculated or having a rare mint mark. Generally, in circulated condition, these coins are worth around $1, while uncirculated examples can fetch $3 to $5 or more. Special editions or coins in exceptional condition may have higher values among collectors. Always consult a reputable coin dealer or price guide for the most accurate valuation.
Unless it is in official mint packaging or a rare die variety/error it is only worth $1. Loose uncirculated Susan B Anthony dollars are easy to come by and there is next to no collector demand because collectors hate the design and the coin and those who want to collect it already have. The only demand is for proof or mint sets, not for loose coins.
It isn't silver but rather copper-nickel clad just like all other circulating US coinage like the dime and quarter. Unless the coin is in a special mint set, proof, or truly uncirculated, it is only worth $1. The Susan B Anthony dollar was only unpopular, not rare.
1 dollar. It is very common and not rare.
It was the dollar. The coins are in common circulation that save for rare die varieties, errors and ones in mint packaging they are only worth $1.
All Susan B. Anthony, Sacagawea, and Presidential series dollar coins are legal tender everywhere in the US. They're not rare and not valuable, and are worth just $1 each.
None of the SBA Dollar coins struck for general circulation (except the 1979-P Near Date) have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums
$1, it is not a rare coin, many, many, many were minted.
No and they will never be rare.
No, they are common.
nimrod
The value of a 1979 Susan B. Anthony dollar can vary based on its condition and whether it has any unique characteristics, such as being uncirculated or having a rare mint mark. Generally, in circulated condition, these coins are worth around $1, while uncirculated examples can fetch $3 to $5 or more. Special editions or coins in exceptional condition may have higher values among collectors. Always consult a reputable coin dealer or price guide for the most accurate valuation.
She is pictured on $1 coins made from 1979 till 1981 and again in 1999. They are made out of copper and nickel. They have no extra value and are not rare.
It depends by what you mean "rare". No, Eisenhower, Susan B Anthony, Presidential and Sacajawea dollar coins are all struck in base metals and contain no price premium over face value unless they were sold in special mint sets and are proof coins. They are all unpopular coins (the Eisenhower for its size, the Susan B Anthony from its similarity to the quarter and rather unattractive design, the Presidential Dollars and Sacagawea dollars are often hoarded as being "rare" coins and also their designs are rather unattractive) but not rare. Dollar coins dated 1935 and before are all struck in silver and as such contain a large price premium over face value (well over $20 in silver content alone) and they are widely collected and desirable years and mint-marks can make even a worn coin worth a hundred dollars or more. But the dollar coins minted since the Peace dollar (last minted in 1935) contain no silver and contain no real "key dates" and have low collector demand and are worth no more than face value.
For the Peace dollar series 1935 is not a rare coin. The only rare Peace dollar is the 1922 high relief matte proof coins.