A 2004 nickel is worth 5 cents. A gold-plated '04 nickel is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. There is no standard market value for modified coins like that.
It most likely is gold plated, gold plating adds really no value to the coin and like any other 1999 nickel, it is worth 5 cents.
There's never been a gold nickel. Your coin is either plated or was affected by exposure to heat or chemicals. Either way, it has no added value.
Gold-plated but not gold. It's an ordinary nickel that someone plated for use in jewelry or as a novelty piece. The US never minted nickels (or dimes or quarters for that matter) out of gold - it's worth far too much to use in small-denomination coins.
Regardless of the DATE. The US has never made a Five Cent gold coin. It has been gold plated and has no collectible value.
A 2004 nickel is worth 5 cents. A gold-plated '04 nickel is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. There is no standard market value for modified coins like that.
It's a 2004 Jefferson nickel that has been gold plated, has no collectible value and is just a fancy nickel.
Only the value of the metals used to make it.
The coin is either gold plated or just looks gold. Either way it is not solid gold. It is only worth 5 cents.
It's worth five cents. Gold plating doesn't add any value.
Gold-plated, not real gold. That makes it an altered coin with no real value to a collector.
It most likely is gold plated, gold plating adds really no value to the coin and like any other 1999 nickel, it is worth 5 cents.
There's never been a gold nickel. Your coin is either plated or was affected by exposure to heat or chemicals. Either way, it has no added value.
Gold-plated but not gold. It's an ordinary nickel that someone plated for use in jewelry or as a novelty piece. The US never minted nickels (or dimes or quarters for that matter) out of gold - it's worth far too much to use in small-denomination coins.
It's not gold, but gold plated. It's a novelty coin that has no collectible value.
US nickels have never been struck in gold. Your coin is plated so it has no added value.
Regardless of the DATE. The US has never made a Five Cent gold coin. It has been gold plated and has no collectible value.