It most likely is gold plated, gold plating adds really no value to the coin and like any other 1999 nickel, it is worth 5 cents.
There's never been a gold nickel. Your coin is either plated or was affected by exposure to heat or chemicals. Either way, it has no added value.
A 2004 nickel is worth 5 cents. A gold-plated '04 nickel is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. There is no standard market value for modified coins like that.
A 1999 American Eagle gold bullion coin is 1/4 ounce of pure gold, the value goes up and down with the spot price of gold during market trading. As of 10:05am 3-17-11 value is $350.20
Gold plating a coin only changes its value because of the amount of gold on it which is usually very little. It is of no numismatic value to U.S. coin collectors because it is an altered coin.
As of today about $250.00
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
Five cents. The gold plating someone put on a regular nickel destroyed any collector's value it had.
Five cents.
There's never been a gold nickel. Your coin is either plated or was affected by exposure to heat or chemicals. Either way, it has no added value.
Sorry, but nickels were never made of gold.
No nickel has ever been made of gold. You may have one that has been plated or it may be toned a gold color. Either way it's bad. Gold plating kills the collectible value of any coin. And for buffalo nickels, gold or blue toning means it's been chemically cleaned at some point. Unfortunately it's just a nickel.
Gold-plated, not real gold. That makes it an altered coin with no real value to a collector.
Only the value of the metals used to make it.
Gold-plated, but not gold. All circulating Eisenhower dollars were struck in copper-nickel, so the gold-plating doesn't add anything to its $1 value.
It's not a Morgan nickel but a Liberty Head Nickel with values of $3.00-$5.00 for average condition coins
A 2004 nickel is worth 5 cents. A gold-plated '04 nickel is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. There is no standard market value for modified coins like that.