The face value of ANY coin is its denomination; e.g. the face value of a dime is 10 cents, the face value of a nickel is 5 cents. A coin could be worth much more than that, however, if it's made of a precious metal or is rare and sought by collectors.
But ... 1972 U.S. $1 coins are made of copper-nickel, not silver, and hundreds of millions were made, so they aren't made of precious metals and aren't rare. That means their face value = their metal value = their collector value, all $1.
Sorry no silver in this coin and it has only face value.
The coin is only face value, has no silver and is still in circulation.
None of the Eisenhower dollar coins (1971-1978) made for general circulation have any silver or are worth more than face value.
8-14-11>>> US Kennedy half dollars made for general circulation dated 1971 to 2011 are not silver. The coin is face value.
...the face value is $1.
Sorry no silver in this coin and it has only face value.
The coin is only face value, has no silver and is still in circulation.
A 1972 Eisenhower dollar is just a big dollar, only proof & special collector's coins sold from the mint have more than face value.
Are not silver and have no value over face unless they have an "S" mintmark (which means they were not intended for circulation) or in a mint set.
None of the Eisenhower dollar coins (1971-1978) made for general circulation have any silver or are worth more than face value.
The coin is face value.
...the face value is $1.
8-14-11>>> US Kennedy half dollars made for general circulation dated 1971 to 2011 are not silver. The coin is face value.
Peace dollars were only struck from the end of 1921 until 1935. If your coin is dated 1972 it's an Eisenhower dollar and it's made of copper-nickel, not silver, and is only worth face value.
The coin is face value
The coin is a Eisenhower dollar and has no silver in it. Only proof and uncirculated coins from the mint have more than face value.
Eisenhower Dollars made for circulation only have face value and has no silver.