a dollar
There were four types of United States Mint Proof Sets produced in 1992. The normal 1992-S Proof Set is worth approximately $6-$8. The Prestige set (with Olympic half and dollar) is worth approximately $70-$90. The regular Silver set is worth approximately $10-$15. The Silver Premier Set is worth approximately $10-$16.
A 1992 American Eagle Bullion Silver Dollar in MS65 condition is worth: $24.00.
A 1992 American Eagle Bullion Silver Dollar in MS65 condition is worth: $24.00.
All circulating halves dated 1971 and later are made of copper-nickel, not silver, and are only worth 50 cents unless you have a proof or uncirculated specimen; these can be worth around $2. Starting in 1992 some proof halves were struck in 90% silver and sold as special "prestige" coins.
Actually it's the first year for 90% silver Proof quarters. The Mint started making silver proof sets in 1992, the Half dollar, Quarter and Dime are struck in the Pre-1965 standards.
1964 proof Kennedy halves are 90% silver, 68, 69, 70 proofs are 40%. The 3-piece Bicentennial silver proof & silver mint sets are 40% and 1992 to date silver sets are 90%.
4 types of United States Mint Proof Sets were made in 1992. The clad 1992-S Proof set has a current retail value of $8. The Prestige set that has the Olympic half & dollar in it is $40.00. The regular silver set is $29.00. The silver Premier set is $31.
No US quarters dated 1966 are silver. The only US quarters struck in silver are dated 1964 or before with the exception of silver proof sets (most proof sets are -not- silver and silver proof sets are marked as silver) but those are dated from 1992-present.
This is NOT an original 1804 silver dollar. The value is only worth what the metal is worth. If it's made out silver it will be worth more than if it just has a silver plating with some like a stainless steel core.
If you have the proof eagles in the Mint-issued plum-colored packaging, then the 1991 is worth about $40 and the 1992 is worth about $35AnswerIf it's a proof issue, it might sell for $40 or $50. If it's a standard bullion piece but not struck as a proof, it would be worth a bit more than the current spot price of one ounce of silver. That price changes daily, so you'd have to check it in the financial pages of your newspaper or on-line at a financial site like CNN Money (among many such sites).
These were sold as bullion coins and track the price of silver, about $17/oz at this point. Those sold in "government packaging" should be proof coins. A 1992 S proof eagle should retail in the neighborhood of $60.