the price is increasing. I've heard rumors of a family trying to corner the market--- who knows if it's true, but the e-bay prices on this coin is on the rise. a ms 65 is going for about $35 and the 66 is going for around $75.
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∙ 12y agoA 1957 US nickel is worth face value unless it is in exceptional condition or a rare variety, in which case it could be worth slightly more to a collector. It's always best to have a coin appraised by a professional to determine its true value.
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∙ 14y agoThe US never struck any Libery nickles, but we did strike JEFFERSON NICKELS dated 1959 and they are still worth 5 cents
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∙ 14y agoThe coin is just a common nickel, spend it.
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∙ 14y agoThese can still occasionally be found in circulation. They carry no real numismatic premium.
A 1957 nickel is worth face value only, unless it's uncirculated or a proof coin.
In the US, a nickel is worth 5 cents.
The only nickels with silver in them were minted during WW2. All others are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel. A 1957 U.S. nickel is worth less than a dime in circulated condition.
$100,000,000,000 because such a coin doesn't exist. Silver was only used in US nickels from 1942-1945 on coins with a large mintmark over the Monticello. A 1957 nickel is a common coin, worth a dollar or so if completely uncirculated but only really 5 cents if circulated.
In average condition either coin is worth face value only. If it's an uncirculated or a proof coin in its original packaging, it might be worth 50 cents or so.
1957 is an extremely common series, currently worth about $2.
Nickel is an element that has the same name as a US coin worth five cents.
A 1957D nickel in very fine to uncirculated condition is worth $0.35. If this mispositioned 'A' is actually a 'misstrike error' (and can be verified as such), then it is worth approx. $5.00.
No. Any cent plated with nickel was altered outside of the mint. That makes it a damaged coin worth 1 cent only.
It's worth exactly 5 cents.
Canadian coins aren't usable in the US. A Canadian nickel isn't worth anything in the US. IN Canada, the 2004 nickel is worth .05 cents. However, if you can sneak it into your change one day, you'll get .05 cents worth of stuff.
One is not a nickel, it is a quarter. The other coin is a nickel.