A Buffalo Nickel (sometimes called an Indian Head Nickel) is a 5 cent piece created by the United States Mint from 1913 to 1938. When you put condition and mint into play, the coin can be worth 50 cents to 10 dollars.
A US Indian Head nickel dated 1930 is common, coins in average circulated grades sell of $1.00-$3.00
These coins are commonly known as either Indian Head or Buffalo nickels. Both names are about equally common. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1930 US nickel?" for more information.
This can be worth anywhere between 10 cents and a dollar.
The coin is called either an Indian Head nickel or a buffalo nickel, but not "buffalo head". After all, it shows the entire buffalo and not just its head, LOL! Please see the question "What is the value of a 1930 US nickel?" for more information.
None of the Indian Head (or Buffalo) nickels have EVER been made of silver. The 1930 is a common date and circulated coins have retail values of 25 cents to $3.00 depending on condition.
A US Indian Head nickel dated 1930 is common, coins in average circulated grades sell of $1.00-$3.00
These coins are commonly known as either Indian Head or Buffalo nickels. Both names are about equally common. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1930 US nickel?" for more information.
This can be worth anywhere between 10 cents and a dollar.
The coin is called either an Indian Head nickel or a buffalo nickel, but not "buffalo head". After all, it shows the entire buffalo and not just its head, LOL! Please see the question "What is the value of a 1930 US nickel?" for more information.
Depending on wear. Average value is $1.00-$3.00.
These coins are commonly known as either Indian Head or Buffalo nickels. Both names are about equally common. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1930 US nickel?" for specific information. 1930 is a common date Buffalo nickel, most circulated coins in collectible condition have retail values of $1.00-$4.00 but can be as high as $20.00
None of the Indian Head (or Buffalo) nickels have EVER been made of silver. The 1930 is a common date and circulated coins have retail values of 25 cents to $3.00 depending on condition.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmarks, retail value is $1.00-$4.00 for most coins. The 1930 Buffalo nickel is a very common coin.
The 1930 Indian head (or Buffalo) nickel was only struck at the Philadelphia & San Francisco Mints so it can't have a "D" mintmark. In average circulated condition, it's valued from $1.00-$3.00.
The 1930-S Buffalo nickel is valued at $1.00-$4.00 in average condition. The "F" is on all the coins, It's the designers initial.
The 'E' you see is actually a 'F' and it's not a mintmark, it's the designers initial (Fraser) mintmarks are on the reverse of all Indian head nickels. A 1930 nickel in average collectible condition is $1.00-$3.00
The last Liberty nickels were minted for circulation in 1912. If you have a Buffalo nickel with that date and a small "D" underneath the words 'FIVE CENTS' on the coin's reverse, it is worth about $4 in XF condition. If you use a strong magnifying glass and can see a shadow of the letter "S" underneath the D, you have a rarer issue that is worth $20-$25 in XF.