Go to: Coin Converter
Choose two coins or banknotes, then a quantity: | ||
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How Many Coins Are In Each Roll?
Penny (1 cent or 1/100 US$) | 50 | $0.50 |
Nickel (5 cents or 1/20 US$) | 40 | $2 |
Dime (10 cents or 1/10 US$) | 50 | $5 |
Quarter (25 cents or 1/4 US$) | 40 | $10 |
Kennedy Half-dollar (50 cents or 1/2 US$) | 20 | $10 |
Native American One Dollar (100 cents or 1 s or 1/2 US$) | 25 | $25 |
Presidential One Dollar ($1 piece) | 25 | $25 |
What coins are used in today (2022)?
The penny, nickel, dime, and quarter are the circulating coins that we commonly use today.
Go to: Coin Converter
Choose two coins or banknotes, then a quantity: | ||
↺ | ||
How Many Coins Are In Each Roll?
Penny (1 cent or 1/100 US$) | 50 | $0.50 |
Nickel (5 cents or 1/20 US$) | 40 | $2 |
Dime (10 cents or 1/10 US$) | 50 | $5 |
Quarter (25 cents or 1/4 US$) | 40 | $10 |
Kennedy Half-dollar (50 cents or 1/2 US$) | 20 | $10 |
Native American One Dollar (100 cents or 1 s or 1/2 US$) | 25 | $25 |
Presidential One Dollar ($1 piece) | 25 | $25 |
What coins are used in today (2022)?
The penny, nickel, dime, and quarter are the circulating coins that we commonly use today.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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There are many $5 banknotes, bills or coins, including:
- Australian five-dollar note
- Canadian five-dollar note
- New Zealand five-dollar note
- United States five-dollar bill
- Hong Kong five-dollar coin
- Hong Kong five-dollar note
Other currencies that issue $5 banknotes, bills or coins are:
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See also[edit]
- "5 dols", a 2018 song by Christine and the Queens, simultaneously released in English as "5 Dollars"
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title $5.
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Australian 1988 Parliament House $5 as issued by the Commonwealth Bank
Update: Triangular 5 Dollar Parliament House Coin Released – in May 2013 the Royal Australian Mint released a $5 triangular silver proof coin celebrating the 25th anniversary of the opening of Parliament House. You can read more about it here.
In general Australian $5 coins are valued at just that, five dollars. Yes, they are really only worth their five dollar face value. Uncirculated 5 dollar coins such as the 1988 Parliament House issue, the 1990 Simpson and his Donkey $5 or the 1992 Year of Space $5 struggle to even get $5 in the secondary market so it’s often better to just take them to the bank and cash them in for $5. Even coin dealers don’t want to buy them!!
The five dollar coin has never been popular although just over 3 million were issued via the Commonwealth Bank in 1988 where it was quite a novelty to stop in and buy a $5 coin for $5. This was the year Australians were excited over the newest denomination coin, the $2. It was thought a $5 coin for circulation may well have been on the cards. These coins haven’t been a great investment though as today you’re lucky that they are legal tender so you will get your $5 back.
Most uncirculated issues have been minted in aluminium, zinc and bronze. The 1994 Vote for Women Centenary, Womens Enfranchisement bi-metal coin has been voted one of the ugliest designs in decimal history. Proof issues (often in silver) have faired a little better and the odd issue a real investment. Silver coins will often trade for their bullion content and not numismatic value. But you never can tell which issue is going to be the money earner and which is the dud, but in the case of 5 dollar coins it’s pretty safe to assume that they’ll prove to be a poor investment.