If you mean one of the 4 Westward Journey nickels dated 2004 and 2005 it's a novelty item that has no numismatic value at all. But it's still a nickel.
Regardless of the DATE. The US has never made a Five Cent gold coin. It has been gold plated and has no collectible value.
Gold-plated but not gold. It's an ordinary nickel that someone plated for use in jewelry or as a novelty piece. The US never minted nickels (or dimes or quarters for that matter) out of gold - it's worth far too much to use in small-denomination coins.
Roughly 75% of the gold quote.
roughly $3000
10 cents for the copper-nickel coin underneath and about a penny or 2 for the gold plating. The US never minted gold dimes - they'd be worth A LOT more than 10 cents, after all!
In the US, a nickel is worth 5 cents.
No. US nickels have never contained any gold. For one thing, even when the price of gold was much lower a gold coin the size of a US nickel would have been worth several dollars; today it would be worth hundreds.
US nickels have never been struck in gold. Your coin is plated so it has no added value.
Regardless of the DATE. The US has never made a Five Cent gold coin. It has been gold plated and has no collectible value.
Gold-plated but not gold. It's an ordinary nickel that someone plated for use in jewelry or as a novelty piece. The US never minted nickels (or dimes or quarters for that matter) out of gold - it's worth far too much to use in small-denomination coins.
The US nickel was first issued in 1866. Please re-examine your coin.
Canadian coins aren't usable in the US. A Canadian nickel isn't worth anything in the US. IN Canada, the 2004 nickel is worth .05 cents. However, if you can sneak it into your change one day, you'll get .05 cents worth of stuff.
Average retail value: $1.00-$3.00
It's the usual practice of this site to answer a single question at a time. Please see:"What is the value of a 1940 US nickel?""What is the value of a 1942 US nickel?""What is the value of a 1944 US nickel?"
This is a common date Liberty Head nickel. Most have heavy wear with values of $1.00-$3.00.
a 1920 buffalo nickel is worth about 2.50 because it's not that rare
....No such coin exists. The US didn't even exist as a country in 1758, nor was nickel used in coinage much back in 1758.