If you find the right coin shop, about eight dollars. Not knowing the condition (most likely you picked it out of a pocket full of change, got it at the bank, or work as a cashier and was given to you as tenure), some coin shops will by it for the metal content, silver. If it is in good enough condition, maybe more. I had a very good condition Walking Liberty $1 older than your coin, and the guy only gave me $15 for it. Good Luck
?????There were no US $1 coins minted between 1905 and 1920 inclusive, so a "1906 dollar" is either from Another Country, a fantasy piece, a different denomination, or a fake. Please check again and post a new question.It's not a dollar, no dollar US coins were issued in 1906 the last year was 1904. The coin is likely a 1906 Barber Half dollar and if it has so much wear you can't read the words HALF DOLLAR on the reverse the value is just for the silver in the coin, about $6.00
If you have a US silver dollar with a date of 1906, I'm sorry, you have a counterfeit coin. The US Silver dollar was not minted in 1906. Some of these are actually silver coins, and may have a value for the weight of silver they contain, but they are not collector's coins.
There were no dollar coins produced in the United States in 1906. Look at the coin again and post new question.
No silver dollars were made in 1906, look at the back of the coin at the bottom for the words Half Dollar. It's likely a Barber half dollar, values for average circulated coins are $8.00-$14.00
No US dollar coins exist dated 1906. Also the coin can't have a "P" mintmark because the first US coin to use it was the 1942 silver Jefferson nickel. Look at the coin again and post new question.
It's not a dollar, no dollar US coins were issued in 1906 the last year was 1904. The coin is likely a 1906 Barber Half dollar and if it has so much wear you can't read the words HALF DOLLAR on the reverse the value is just for the silver in the coin, about $6.00
If you have a US silver dollar with a date of 1906, I'm sorry, you have a counterfeit coin. The US Silver dollar was not minted in 1906. Some of these are actually silver coins, and may have a value for the weight of silver they contain, but they are not collector's coins.
The real answer is...Its not a 1906 Liberty dollar. Its a 1986 commemorative dollar with the 8 altered. The US did not make a liberty dollar in 1906. A "s" mint mark is a circulated coin and the "p" is collectors coin. Sorry to burst your bubble!
Sorry, no US dollar coins dated 1906 were struck.
There were no dollar coins produced in the United States in 1906. Look at the coin again and post new question.
No silver dollars were made in 1906, look at the back of the coin at the bottom for the words Half Dollar. It's likely a Barber half dollar, values for average circulated coins are $8.00-$14.00
The value of a 2000 5 dollar coin from the Republic of Liberia can be worth as much as 16 dollars. The value of the coin is dependent upon the condition of the coin.
The value of a 2000 5 dollar coin from the Republic of Liberia can be worth as much as 16 dollars. The value of the coin is dependent upon the condition of the coin.
No US dollar coins exist dated 1906. Also the coin can't have a "P" mintmark because the first US coin to use it was the 1942 silver Jefferson nickel. Look at the coin again and post new question.
The coin is not a silver liberty dollar. It's a 1979 Susan B. Anthony Dollar coin and has no silver in it and the value is one dollar.
The coin is a Eisenhower dollar (1971-1978) not a " Liberty Head" dollar. The coin is face value, unless it's proof coin.
The plating adds nothing to the value of a dollar coin, unless someone wants it.