Seated Liberty Quarter Values
| DATE | GOOD | UNCIRCULATED |
|---|---|---|
| 1857 Liberty Seated Quarter | $25 | $160 |
| 1857 Liberty Seated Quarter (O) | $30 | $400 |
| 1857 Liberty Seated Quarter (S) | $60 | $1,200 |
| 1858 Liberty Seated Quarter | $25 | $175 |
How much is a 1824 silver half dollar worth?
Bust Half Dollars Future Value
| DATE | GOOD | EXTREMELY FINE |
|---|---|---|
| 1824 Capped Bust Half Dollar (4 Over 2) | $650 | $5,000 |
| 1824 Capped Bust Half Dollar (5 Over 2) | $175 | $2,500 |
| 1824 Capped Bust Half Dollar (5 Over 4) | $100 | $1,500 |
| 1828 Capped Bust Half Dollar | $100 | $1,450 |
How much is a 1850 silver half dollar worth?
Seated Liberty Half Dollars Future Value
| DATE | GOOD | UNCIRCULATED |
|---|---|---|
| 1850 Liberty Seated Half Dollar | $240 | $1,000 |
| 1850 Liberty Seated Half Dollar (O) | $42 | $300 |
| 1851 Liberty Seated Half Dollar | $750 | $2,000 |
| 1851 Liberty Seated Half Dollar (O) | $42 | $350 |
How much is a silver half dollar worth?
All half dollars issued in 1964 and years prior had 11.4 grams or almost 2/5th an ounce of silver in each. To calculate how much a silver half dollar melt value is, use the following equation and data inputs.
How much is a 1965 silver half dollar worth?
All pre-1965 silver half dollars are silver coins containing 0.362 troy ounces (11.4 grams) of physical silver weight and value. Older silver half dollars are thus worth over 8600% more than their present-day cupro-nickel versions ($6.99 per silver half dollar melt value vs just over 8¢ in current half dollar melt value).
How to calculate the melt value of a half dollar?
Your final four options allow you to calculate the melt value of your U.S. silver half dollars by weighing them. You can choose to weigh by either ounces, pounds, grams, or kilograms. Just enter a whole number or decimal representing the total weight in the appropriate weight text box.
Why was silver removed from half dollar coins?
The 89 th US Congress enacted the Coinage Act of 1965 in response to the growing value of pure silver and the resulting rise in minting costs. Under this Act, the USA eliminated silver from all circulating half dollars (50¢) and quarter-dollar (25¢) coins.