1964 Lincoln cents are very common, way too many original rolls and Mint bags still exist for the coin to have high values. Typical uncirculated coins sell for 5 to 10 cents.
August 10, 2009 In 1964 the US Mint sold 1,008,108 Uncirculated Mint Sets for $2.40 each. Today those sets are valued at $26.
If your 1971 coin is a uncirculated example it may be worth about $5.00 because the 1971 & 1972 issue coins were not included in the Uncirculated Mint sets sold from the Mint in those years. In general none of the circulated coins have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums. The Mint did offer Proof and Uncirculated coins in 1971-1976 that were struck in 40% silver.
The 1970 Uncirculated US Mint Set is valued at $18.
With original Mint packaging retail value is about $30.00, issue price was $2.40
1964 Lincoln cents are very common, way too many original rolls and Mint bags still exist for the coin to have high values. Typical uncirculated coins sell for 5 to 10 cents.
Brass not gold. Just the Mint issue uncirculated coins have very small premiums above face value.
August 10, 2009 In 1964 the US Mint sold 1,008,108 Uncirculated Mint Sets for $2.40 each. Today those sets are valued at $26.
If your 1971 coin is a uncirculated example it may be worth about $5.00 because the 1971 & 1972 issue coins were not included in the Uncirculated Mint sets sold from the Mint in those years. In general none of the circulated coins have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums. The Mint did offer Proof and Uncirculated coins in 1971-1976 that were struck in 40% silver.
The 1970 Uncirculated US Mint Set is valued at $18.
These coins are no longer in circulation since they were withdrawn and demonetised in 1987. Unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they have little or no value.
These coins are no longer in circulation since they were withdrawn and demonetised in 1987. Unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they have little or no value.
Assuming the coin's denomination is given in euro cents and not pence, you have a common circulation coin from Ireland. In that case it's not worth any premium. Ireland is part of the eurozone so a euro coin would not have entered circulation any earlier than 2002. If it's not a euro coin, please post a new and separate question with its date.
These coins are no longer in circulation since Irelands changeover to the Euro in 2002. Unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they have little or no value.
These coins are potentially still in circulation so, unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they are worth 20 cents.
If your 1972 coin is a uncirculated example it may be worth about $5.00 because the 1971 & 1972 issue coins were not included in the Uncirculated Mint sets sold from the Mint in those years. In general none of the coins made for circulation have any silver and are not worth more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums. The Mint did offer Proof and Uncirculated coins in 1971-1976 that were struck in 40% silver.
With original Mint packaging retail value is about $30.00, issue price was $2.40