answersLogoWhite

0

Australian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a building).

Bahamian five dollar note: Obverse: Sir Cecil Wallace-Whitfield. Reverse: (no face; a building).

Bahraini five dollar note: Obverse: Sir Frank Worrell. Reverse: (no face; a building).

Belize five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; several mixed images).

Bermudian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; several buildings).

Brunei five dollar note: Obverse: Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah. Reverse: (no face; rainforest).

Canadian five dollar note (1954 series): Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Otter Falls).

Canadian five dollar note (1969 series, 1986 series, 2001 series): Obverse: Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Reverse: (no face; a boat, a kingfisher and children playing ice hockey, repsectively).

Cayman Islands five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a schooner).

East Carribean five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a building).

Fijian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Nadi International Airport).

Guyanese five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of bank, Kaieteur Falls). Reverse: (no face; sugar harvesting and wheat processing scenes).

Hong Kong five dollar coin (pre1980 series): Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Royal Emblem of Hong Kong/value).

Jamaican five dollar note: Obverse: Norman Manley. Reverse: (no face; coat of arms of Jamaica).

Liberian five dollar note: no information found in research. Please insert information as appropriate should you find it.

Namibian five dollar coin: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of Namibia). Reverse: (no face; eagle or hawk).

New Zealand five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: Sir Edmund Hillary.

Singaporean five dollar note: President Yusof bin Ishak. Reverse: (no face; Garden City).

Solomon Islands five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of Solomon Islands). Reverse: (no face; a wooden hut).

Surinamese five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; a building). Reverse: (no face; a river and palm tree).

Taiwanese new five dollar

United States five dollar note: Obverse: Abraham Lincoln. Reverse: (no face; Lincoln Memorial).

The Cook Islands dollar has no five dollar denomination in either coin or note. The Kiribati dollar has no denomination of its own above the $2 coind, and Australian notes are circulated.

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Whose face is five cents coin?

Thomas Jefferson. whose face is five cents coin


Whose face is on the five dollar bill?

Abraham Lincoln is on the five dollar bill.


Whose face is on a US five dollar bill?

Abraham Lincoln Abraham Lincoln


Whose picture is on a five-dollar gold coin?

Miss Liberty is on most $5 gold coins, except for various commemoratives.


Face on 5000 bill?

President on $5,000 five thousand dollar bill: James Madison James Madison was featured on one dollar $1 coin.


Whose face is on the Philippine five peso bill?

Emilio Aguinaldo on the coin bill, the paper bill doesn't exist nowadays.


Whose face is on the five hundred one thousand ten thousand one hundred thousand dollar bills?

not a makable bill


What the value of 1845 gold 5 dollar coin?

value of 1845 us five dollar coin


How much is a 1848 5 dollar gold coin worth?

A 1848 five dollar coin is worth about 1,600 dollars to about 2,100 dollars. A 1848 five dollar coin has been auctioned for over 71,000 dollars.


What is the value of a 1985 New Zealand Five Dollar coin?

Such a coin does not exist. The New Zealand Five Dollar coin is Non-Circulating Legal Tender and was first issued in 1990.


Is there a US five dollar coin?

Yes, the United States has issued a five-dollar coin known as the "golden dollar" coin, specifically the Susan B. Anthony dollar and the Sacagawea dollar, which are each worth one dollar but sometimes colloquially referred to in terms of their gold content. Additionally, the U.S. Mint has produced commemorative five-dollar gold coins, which are limited edition pieces often created to honor specific events or people. However, there is no standard circulating five-dollar coin in regular use.


Five dollar coin?

That's not really a question.