In most cases copies and replicas are made of base metal with only a thin plating of gold or silver, and sometimes not even that. These are only worth a few dollars at most.
Some replica and restrike coins are in fact made of precious metal, like the silver $100 "Union" replicas produced by the Smithsonian. These coins normally have their metal content shown in both weight and purity, and are worth roughly the current price of that much metal.
Being that it's a copy, it's not worth much of anything.
As a copy, it's worth next to nothing.
A copy of any US coin has no numismatic value. Its principal worth is the value of the metals used to produce it plus whatever you are willing to pay for it.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 at coin shows.
The word "COPY" is a dead giveaway. That means it's a replica coin and definitely not the real thing. Unless includes the name, weight and fineness of precious metal somewhere on the design, the copy is most likely made of a base metal plated with brass or a tiny amount of gold. In that case it's only worth a couple of dollars as a conversation piece.
Being that it's a copy, it's not worth much of anything.
As a copy, it's worth next to nothing.
A copy of any US coin has no numismatic value. Its principal worth is the value of the metals used to produce it plus whatever you are willing to pay for it.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 at coin shows.
The word "COPY" is a dead giveaway. That means it's a replica coin and definitely not the real thing. Unless includes the name, weight and fineness of precious metal somewhere on the design, the copy is most likely made of a base metal plated with brass or a tiny amount of gold. In that case it's only worth a couple of dollars as a conversation piece.
These copy's of the 1933 Double Eagle have no numismatic collectible value, most sell for $5.00 or less at coin shows.
As a copy, it's not worth much of anything.
As a copy, its value is minimal -- perhaps a couple dollars.
This stuff ends up on eBay or in a dealers junk box at coin shows. They have very little resale value. Most I see sell for about $5.00.
The coin has no collectible value at all. It's a copy!
What's a 1870 twenty dollar copy coin worth
This stuff is sold on TV for about $20.00 to $30.00 and shows up at a dealer or coin show in the junk box for 5 bucks.