August 30, 2009
1971 Kennedy half dollars can still be obtained through banks and occasionally in circulation. They're all made of copper-nickel and don't contain any silver so their circulated value is 50 cents.
The 1971 Kennedy half dollar was produced for circulation by 2 US Mint facilities; Philadelphia which is shown as 1971-P and Denver which is shown as 1971-D. Proof coins were produced by the US Mint in San Francisco which is shown as 1971-S. To determine which coin you have it will be necessary to locate the mint mark. This mark consists of a small letter which will be found on the obverse [heads] side of the coin just above the date at the base of the neck. A letter "P" is for Philadelphia and a letter "D" is for Denver. A letter "S" is for San Francisco.The uncirculated and proof values for these coins are shown in the following list. To better understand the grading system used to grade coins, click on the link named "COIN GRADING" in the "RELATED LINKS" section located along the left side of this box.
Uncirculated Grades.............1971-P.........1971-D
MS60.....................................$6..................$6
MS63......................................$10...............$8
MS64......................................$15...............$12
MS65......................................$35...............$17
MS66......................................$325.............$45
MS67......................................$2,000..........$125
Proof Grades............................1971-S
PF63.........................................$9
PF64.........................................$11
PF65.........................................$12
PF66.........................................$15
PF67.........................................$20
PF68.........................................$25
PF69.........................................$32
Kennedy halves are valuable 1964-1970, but 1971 was the first year of no silver, in half dollars, so there was a mass production that year, so only really 50 cents.
No such coin. Kennedy is only on the half dollars. Starting In 1971, the dollar coins are Eisenhower dollars. The coin is just face value.
50 cents, just spend it.
Please check the denomination of the coin. A 1971 One Dollar coin is an EISENHOWER dollar not a JFK dollar. Kennedy is only on Half Dollars. No matter what coin it actually is, both are just face value.
There's no such coin. JFK is on the half dollar. In 1971, President Eisenhower was on the dollar. Both coins are only worth face value if they're in circulated condition. They were only struck in copper-nickel, not silver so they have no added value.
Eisenhower was on the dollar coin from 1971 to 1978. J. F. Kennedy is on the half dollar. Whichever one you have, assuming the coin is from circulation it's only worth face value. They're made of copper-nickel, not silver, so they have no precious metal content.
A Mint State 1971 Kennedy has a retail value of $1.00-$2.00
.50
50 cents, just spend it.
No such coin. Kennedy is only on the half dollars. Starting In 1971, the dollar coins are Eisenhower dollars. The coin is just face value.
Kennedy Half dollars are very common, coins from 1971 to date contain no silver and are only face value.
A 1971 Kennedy half dollar is worth anywhere from $45 to $280 dollars. The Kennedy half dollar began circulation in 1964.
1971 Kennedy half dollars are face value only and are still in circulation.
Please check the denomination of the coin. A 1971 One Dollar coin is an EISENHOWER dollar not a JFK dollar. Kennedy is only on Half Dollars. No matter what coin it actually is, both are just face value.
It's just a common half dollar no silver spend it
The "P" Mint mark was not used on half dollars until 1980, it's only a half dollar so spend it.
Not a lot. The 64 is the only 1 that is really desirable.
If you mean a 1971-D half dollar, it's just 50 cents.