It is not a genuine Mint issue or error coin. Please look at the many similar postings for information on how these novelty items are made. This is a privately made novelty item known as a Magician's Coin. It's made by altering 2 normal coins and gluing the pieces back together. These sell regularly on eBay for a couple dollars.
A mule nickel is a valuable error coin worth several thousand dollars. These coins were created when a buffalo nickel die was paired with a Jefferson nickel die, resulting in a mule coin with features from both designs. The specific value can vary based on its condition and rarity.
A blank Jefferson nickel is considered an error or novelty item and does not hold any intrinsic value. Its worth is based on collector demand, and it can range from a few cents to a few dollars depending on the condition and rarity.
A 1949 US Jefferson nickel in circulated condition is worth its face value of 5 cents. However, if it is in uncirculated or mint condition, it may be worth more to collectors depending on its grade and any unique characteristics. It is always a good idea to have rare coins evaluated by a professional coin appraiser.
Half of a half of a nickel is 1.25 cents. A nickel is 5 cents. Half of that is 2.5 cents and half again would be the 1.25 cents.
You may be able to sell it on eBay for under $5 (since these are readily available as novelty items for around $6). Because of the way the US Mint manufactures coins, it's almost impossible to have a real two-headed or two-tailed coin of any denomination. There are situations where you may see a mirror image on one side of a coin, eg a standard obverse or "heads" side on one side and a reversed incuse image on the opposite side, but it will not look like a two-headed coin. Certain coin designs may also have on the "tails" side a different person's head. I don't recall that ever happening with the US nickel, though I could be wrong. The other side will appear completely different, though, from the "heads" side.
I have a nickel that is a color of a penny I have a nickel how much is it worth
It's just a nickel, spend it.
It's just a nickel, spend it.
A 1939 Jefferson Nickel in rough condition is worth $0.50 and in perfect condition can be up to $5.50.
It is known as a "war nickel" and actually contains no nickel! But it is 35% silver and is worth about $1.25 for the silver content.
A Jefferson half dollar would be a real find, because Jefferson is on the nickel and JFK is on the half dollar. Regardless, a 1979 nickel is worth 5¢ and a 1979 half is worth exactly 10 times as much.
Yep....... a nickel
A 2004 Jefferson nickel is still 5 cents. Millions are in circulation.
The 2005 Jefferson nickel with a buffalo on the reverse was struck in enormous numbers. Any that you find in change will only be worth 5 cents.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
There is no such thing as an 1803 U.S. nickel. You have a Lewis & Clark commemorative nickel that was minted in 2004. Turn it over and look next to Jefferson's portrait. These are worth exactly 5 cents.
Values for a circulated war nickel are $1.00-$2.50 depending on the grade