You generally can't buy silver dollars or any older silver coins at a bank. Because the value of the coin greatly exceeds the face value of the coin, if someone wanted to deposit a silver dollar they would only give them $1 for it, when the coin is worth at least $30 in silver content. Because of this few people ever deposit silver coins and the ones that are deposited are bought by the bank employees as curiosities. The only "silver" dollars you might find at a bank are Eisenhower dollars, but these contain no silver and are sold for $1, but since many people keep them as curiosities, there are few banks that carry them in stock, but at some banks you might find a few. Some banks do sell silver proof sets and other collector coins, but the prices that they sell it for is much more than it would cost you to go to a coin shop and buy the exact same set for.
yeah but they will only give you a buck
If you are talking about a US coin, you have to go to the US mint website to buy silver coins. Banks don't sell silver coins. They don't distribute them either.
At the time silver certificates were printed, they could be exchanged at a bank for silver dollars. They haven't been redeemable for silver since 1968, though they're still legal tender at face value.
First build a time machine to travel back to the early 1960s. Then go to a bank with a silver certificate and ask the teller to exchange it for silver coinage. Silver certificates haven't been redeemable for silver coins since 1968.
no
8000 silver dollars...
You generally can't buy silver dollars or any older silver coins at a bank. Because the value of the coin greatly exceeds the face value of the coin, if someone wanted to deposit a silver dollar they would only give them $1 for it, when the coin is worth at least $30 in silver content. Because of this few people ever deposit silver coins and the ones that are deposited are bought by the bank employees as curiosities. The only "silver" dollars you might find at a bank are Eisenhower dollars, but these contain no silver and are sold for $1, but since many people keep them as curiosities, there are few banks that carry them in stock, but at some banks you might find a few. Some banks do sell silver proof sets and other collector coins, but the prices that they sell it for is much more than it would cost you to go to a coin shop and buy the exact same set for.
yeah but they will only give you a buck
It's the Second Bank of the United States.
25 sealed bags of silver dollars where found at a bank in olathe kansas in 2009, the bank kept them in reserve to cover deposits as required by law but prefered to keep real silver instead of cash. Turns out that was smart as the silver dollars where in great shape and slabed by NGC and sell for a premuim.
Yes, It is a silver dollar and you can exchange other silver dollars to the bank, so you should be able to. Yes, It is a silver dollar and you can exchange other silver dollars to the bank, so you should be able to.
They're not silver, they're brass. The last silver dollars were made in 1935. In any case Sacajawea dollars are not rare at all, and any that you get in change or from a bank are only worth face value.
depends on what type of dollar u wanna buy
i dontknow
Coin dealers and jewelers do buy gold & silver coins.
yes, at any bank