$10
According to the NGC Price Guide, as of June 2023, a 10 Dollar Gold Coin from 1899 in circulated condition is worth between $1175 and $1250. However, on the open market 1899 Gold Eagles in pristine, uncirculated condition sell for as much as $34000.
$10 Liberty gold eagle coins were introduced by the U.S. Mint in 1838 and continued in production until 1907 with only one substantial design change, the addition of the motto IN GOD WE TRUST on the reverse in 1866. The first variety, the "No Motto" $10 Liberty gold eagle, was minted from 1838 to 1866.
A double eagle is a gold coin of the United States with a denomination of $20.
These five main base-units of denomination were the mill, the cent, the dime, the dollar, and the eagle, where a cent is 10 mills, a dime is 10 cents, a dollar is 10 dimes, and an eagle is 10 dollars.
The dime, in United States usage, is a ten-cent coin, one tenth of a United States dollar, labeled formally as "one dime".
Melt Value: $10 Face Value 90% Silver
This silver coin contains 7.15 troy ounces of bullion. Based on the metal content and weight, the intrinsic melt value of one $10 Face Value 90% Silver is $171.89 based on today's silver spot price.
1849 Double Eagle Gold Coin
The one remaining specimen is carefully preserved at National Numismatic Collections at the Smithsonian Institution. The 1849 Double Eagle is currently the rarest and most valuable coin in the world, with an estimated worth of nearly $20 million.
The American twenty-cent piece is a coin struck from 1875 to 1878, but only for collectors in the final two years. Proposed by Nevada Senator John P. Jones, it proved a failure due to confusion with the quarter, to which it was close in both size and value.
The one-half ounce coin, $25 face value, is 1.063 inches (27.00 mm) in diameter, contains 0.5000 gold troy ounce and weighs 0.5455 troy ounce (16.966 g).
It weighs 2.83 grams and is 19.41 millimetres in diameter. The reverse of the 10 cent coin features an image of a lyrebird.
American Eagle Platinum Proof Coins
The U.S. Mint produced its first legal tender platinum proof coin in 1997. Its $100 face value is the highest denomination for a U.S. legal tender coin. Produced for collectors, it bears the “W” mint mark of the West Point Mint, where it is produced.
The $100 denomination has been produced by the US Mint since 1997 in the form of the American Platinum Eagle bullion coin. The bullion American Liberty union of 2015, 2019, and 2021 as well as the proof American Liberty 225th Anniversary union of 2017 were struck in 24 karat gold.
This fifty dollar octagonal gold coin—also known as a “slug”—was produced in 1851 in San Francisco. After the California gold rush began in 1849, it became apparent that a mint should be established on the West Coast to remove the need to ship the gold back to Philadelphia to be minted.
The $200 Australian Gold Coins were a limited release legal tender coin produced by the Royal Australian Mint with a face value of $200. They contain 10g of 22ct gold (91.67% pure gold), which equates to 0.2948 ounces of 99.99% pure gold.
$10 eagles contain one-quarter ounce of pure gold and carry an obverse design by Augustus Saint-Gaudens that depicts Miss Liberty and was first made popular on $20 gold double eagles produced from 1907 through 1933. The reverse of the $10 gold eagle, designed by Miley Busiek, shows a family of eagles around a nest.
The 1996 wavy baseline 20c is still the most sought after rare Australian 20c coin. The coins are still in circulation, with one person commenting on the TikTok that they had three of the rare coins. Mr Kandiah also pointed out that cleaning a rare coin could lessen its value to a collector.
Around half of the Australian 20c coins made in 1966 were struck by the Royal Mint in London where one of the tails dies used was damaged and touched up, resulting in the distinctive “wave” pattern on the number two. The 1966 wavy baseline 20c is still the most sought after rare Australian 20c coin.
Coins are in 5, 10, 20 and 50 cent denominations as well as $1 and $2 denominations.
1803 Draped Bust Silver Dollar - This is one of the rarest and most valuable coins, and only four of them are known to exist. Each of these coins are worth around $1 million if they are in good condition.
And the silver crisis of 1945 and 1946 and the 1945 Penny, Australia's rarest penny. And this 1946 cupro nickel florin, an experimental strike in an alternative metal and the the only example held by a private collector. The Melbourne Mint produced four florins in cupro nickel.
A new $2 coin commemorating the end of the Vietnam War has skyrocketed in value and is now selling for up to $1,200 online. The Royal Australian Mint released two $2 coins earlier this month to commemorate 50 years since the end of Australia's involvement in the Vietnam War.
In general Australian $5 coins are valued at just that, five dollars. Yes, they are really only worth their five dollar face value.
Of those Australian coins, the threepence, sixpence, shilling, crown and florin were all minted in silver. Some of these pre-decimal coins are exceptionally rare and valuable, although ironically the most valuable pre-decimal coins of all tend to be pennies.