$50
The 1971 Eisenhower proof dollar is valued from about $10 to $65 depending upon the quality of the coin.
The mint mark on Eisenhower dollars is on the front, below Ike's neck and above the 7 in the date.
All Eisenhower Dollar coins struck for circulation have no silver and are face value only regardless of date or mint mark. Only collectors coins issued by the mint carry retail values over face value.
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.
Unless the Eisenhower dollar came from a special mint set, it is only worth $1. If you have an "S" mint mark though, it may have come from a mint set and worth significantly more.
The 1971 Eisenhower proof dollar is valued from about $10 to $65 depending upon the quality of the coin.
The mint mark on Eisenhower dollars is on the front, below Ike's neck and above the 7 in the date.
Yep. They were made from 1971 to 1978. They have a melt value of $.21.
All Eisenhower Dollar coins struck for circulation have no silver and are face value only regardless of date or mint mark. Only collectors coins issued by the mint carry retail values over face value.
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.
Unless the Eisenhower dollar came from a special mint set, it is only worth $1. If you have an "S" mint mark though, it may have come from a mint set and worth significantly more.
None of the Eisenhower dollars struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.
All Eisenhower dollar coins struck for circulation have only face value, just the proof and special collectors coins sold from the mint hold higher value.
1971 Eisenhower Dollar; with no mint mark, extra fine condition-$1.50, uncirculated-$3.50 with D mint mark, extra fine condition-$1.50, uncirculated-$2.50 with S mint mark, uncirculated-$6.50, proof-$7.00 I assume you're referring to an Eisenhower dollar. If so, it's not silver. Check the edge - it's made of the same copper/nickel "sandwich" metal as dimes and quarters. So unless your coin is a proof coin in its original package, it's only worth face value. Added 6/19/10 The value of the coin, of course, depends on the value of silver at the time of sale/determination. The 1971-S (out of the San Francisco Mint), is 40% silver, as opposed to the aforementioned "copper/nickel 'sandwich'," which means the value is much higher than those from other mints.
None of the Eisenhower dollars regardless of date or mint-mark struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.
None of the Eisenhower dollars struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the Mint are worth more.
The Eisenhower dollars from 1971-1978 struck for an taken from circulation have no silver and only have face value. Proof and special collectors coins sold from the Philadelphia Mint are the only coins of this series that are above face value.