In circulated condition, it has no added value. A nice uncirculated one is worth maybe 25 cents.
It's just a nickel, spend it.
It's just a nickel, spend it.
5 cents
It only has face value 5 cents
It's the usual practice of this site to answer a single question at a time. Please see:"What is the value of a 1940 US nickel?""What is the value of a 1942 US nickel?""What is the value of a 1944 US nickel?"
It's just a nickel, spend it.
It's just a nickel, spend it.
5 cents
It only has face value 5 cents
It's the usual practice of this site to answer a single question at a time. Please see:"What is the value of a 1940 US nickel?""What is the value of a 1942 US nickel?""What is the value of a 1944 US nickel?"
Please don't assume that every US coin minted before 1965 contains silver. US nickels made from 1866 to mid-1942 and from 1946 to the present are made of a copper-nickel alloy, not silver so if you found the coin in change it's only worth 5¢.
If it is in good condition, around $1.10
If it is a US nickel, it is 25% nickel, 75% copper. If it is a Canadian nickel I believe it is 100% nickel.
In circulated condition......less than 25 cents each. These are NOT rare so they have little more than face value.
This design is called either a buffalo nickel or an Indian head nickel; both names are about equally common. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1919 US nickel?" for more information.
The US nickel was first issued in 1866. Please double-check your coin.
5 cents.