No US quarters were struck in silver in 1967, 1964 was the last year for silver quarters put into circulation.
A 1967 Washington quarter has no silver and is face value.
The 1967 Washington quarter has no silver and is still in circulation, the coin is face value.
The coins are face value and have no silver.
25 cents. The coin does not contain any silver and is in common circulation.
There were no S-mint quarters struck from 1955 to 1967 inclusive and no US coins carried mint marks during the transition from silver to clad coinage in 1965-67.
A 1967 Washington quarter has no silver and is face value.
The 1967 Washington quarter has no silver and is still in circulation, the coin is face value.
The coins are face value and have no silver.
silver content in 1867-1967 Canadian quarter
25 cents. The coin does not contain any silver and is in common circulation.
It's a common coin, still in circulation, has no silver and is just face value.
25 cents.
There were no S-mint quarters struck from 1955 to 1967 inclusive and no US coins carried mint marks during the transition from silver to clad coinage in 1965-67.
25 cents. It's likely been altered some how.
All circulation-strike quarters dated 1965 and later are made of copper-nickel, not silver. 1967 quarters don't have mint marks and there are no major varieties, so anything that you find in change will only be worth 25¢.
US coins dated 1965-1967 don't carry mint marks, so it's not possible to tell where your quarter was minted. In circulated condition it has no added value -- there is no silver in it. A nice uncirculated one is worth about 50 cents.
25 cents, unfortunately, no more.