Dollar coins minted since 2000 are made of manganese brass. They're not gold, just "golden".
Absolutely! Nearly all larger banks should have plenty of them - about 2 billion of the new "golden" (actually brass) dollars have been minted since 2000. Many larger cities also use them on their transit systems, and change machines will give change in $1 coins.
Most are just a dollar, if their still in the package from the mint a $1.25 to $2.00. If you got in pocket change spend it.
Sacagawea
2000 was the first year for Sacagawea dollar coins, and they're still worth one dollar.
2000-2008 is on the face 2009 on is on the side
Please take another look.First, the U.S. didn't mint any $1 coins in 1905.Second, from the end of the 19th century up to 1935, $1 coins were only minted out of silver and they were much larger than modern $1 coins.Third, the so-called "golden dollar" is actually made out of brass and was first struck in the year 2000.
Check the date again. These coins were not made in 2000.
75 cents.
Presidential dollars were first issued in 2007. You have a Sacajawea dollar. The golden color on the outside isn't gold. So it's only worth a dollar. If it was plated in real gold it's still only worth a dollar. Gold plating adds no value to coins. In fact it actually decreases the value in some.
If they are $1 dollar coins, spend them. Just gold colored.
If you're referring to the so-called "golden dollars" issued since 2000, or the earlier Susan B. Anthony dollars minted in 1979, 1980, and 1999, the answer is simple - $1. They're general circulation coins minted by the billions.