Depends on what material it is made of, how large it is, and how well made it is. Anywhere from a couple dollars up to $1000 if it is full weight and real .90 fine gold.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 or less at coin shows.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 at coin shows.
As a copy, it's worth next to nothing.
A copy of any US coin has no true value aside from that of the metals used to make it.
A copy of any US coin has no numismatic value. Its principal worth is the value of the metals used to produce it plus whatever you are willing to pay for it.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 or less at coin shows.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 at coin shows.
As a copy, it's worth next to nothing.
A copy of any US coin has no true value aside from that of the metals used to make it.
If the coin has been stamped with copy, or illegally altered, the coin is no longer legal tender and can not be spent. It may have a collector's value - which is too variable to quote.
If it's a copy, it's not worth anything.
Being that it's a copy, it's worth next to nothing. It's gold-plated base metal.
The only legal example of this coin sold for $7,590,020 in July of 2002. The coin is NOT real. It's a copy that has no collectible value.
A copy of any US coin has no numismatic value. Its principal worth is the value of the metals used to produce it plus whatever you are willing to pay for it.
The only legal example sold for $7,590,020 in July of 2002. Many copy's of this coin exist that have no collectible value.
I hope you know this is a fake 1933 Double Eagle with no collectible value at all. The very few I have seen at coins shows are less than $10.00.
Please look at your pocket change. ALL coins carry the words E Pluribus Unum, so it isn't a way of telling one coin from another.Please post a new question with the denomination of the coin you're interested in, or you can copy the link www.coinfacts.com into your browser bar; that site has pictures of many U.S. coins of different dates.If you can't find a picture of an 1886 coin in the denomination you're interested in, coins struck in the years just before or just after that date should have the same design.