25 cents, unfortunately, no more.
A 1967 Washington quarter has no silver and is face value.
...25 cents. It is in common circulation, made out of copper-nickel and not worth any more than 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.
If it is uncirculated it will be worth more than face value but if it is circulated it will be worth 25 cents.
A 1967 Washington quarter has no silver and is face value.
...25 cents. It is in common circulation, made out of copper-nickel and not worth any more than 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.
Unless it's proof, it's face value. No US coins from 1965- 1967 have mintmarks.
If it is uncirculated it will be worth more than face value but if it is circulated it will be worth 25 cents.
A 1945 quarter is composed of 90% silver and 10% copper. The silver content gives it value beyond its face value to collectors and investors.
A US quarter has a face value of 25 cents.
The 1967 Canadian quarter is either made of an 80/20 or 50/50 silver to copper ratio. The Canadian mint distributed both. Both are worth more than face value in silver alone. The 80/20 ratio coins usually sell upwards of 5 times face value.
It commemorates our Centennial as a nation. Probably doesn't have much of an inflate value over face.
25 cents. It is made out of copper-nickel, contains no silver and is worth only face value. They are incredibly common and can easily be found in pocket change.
The coin is face value.