Absolutely. Several billion have been minted since the first Sacajawea brass dollars were released in 2000.
Any major bank and many smaller ones should have both Sacajawea and Presidential Series $1 coins available. Some change machines, especially those associated with major transit systems, also dispense $1 coins.
62 copper dollar coins
1 coin= $1 dollar piece 2 coins= 2 $0.50 pieces and so on. The least number of coins impossible to go into a dollar is 77 coins.
The US had 20 dollar gold coins and also 10, 5, 2 1/2 and 1 dollar gold coins.
-- If the coins are dollar coins, all it takes is one of them. -- If the coins are pennies, it takes 100 of them. -- So a dollar can't be less than 1 or more than 100 coins.
Yes
2 quarters and 5 dimes would be 7 coins that total to 1 dollar. 5 nickels, 1 quarter and 1 half dollar would be another combination.
There are 100 cents in the Australian Dollar. That can constitute - 20 x 5 cent coins. 10 x 10 cent coins. 5 x 20 cent coins. 2 x 50 cent coins. 1 x 1 Dollar coin. The 1 and 2 cent coins are no longer in circulation.
There are 100 one-cent coins in one dollar. This is because one dollar is equal to 100 cents. Therefore, to make a dollar, you would need 100 of the 1-cent coins.
A dollar
20 5 cent coins 20x5=100=1 dollar
3 quarters+ 10 pennies+ 3 nickels= 1 dollar
There are 10 ten-cent coins in one dollar. This is because each ten-cent coin represents 0.10 of a dollar, and 10 of these coins would equal 1 dollar. Therefore, you would need 10 ten-cent coins to make 1 dollar.