Current Silver Bullion Value: $4.61 The US minted the 1964 quarter with no mint mark and also the 1964 D quarter. The mint mark, when present, can be found on the reverse side of the coin.
How much silver weight is in a 1964 quarter?
Every silver quarter minted from 1873 to 1964 has the same weight of 6.25 grams. This includes all of the silver Washington quarters, Standing Liberty quarters, and Barber quarters.
How much silver is in a US silver quarter?
Silver quarters weigh 6.25 grams and are composed of 90% silver, 10% copper, with a total silver weight of 0.1808479 troy ounce pure silver. They were issued from 1932 through 1964.
6.25 grams
All 25¢ quarters issued in 1964 and years prior had 6.25 grams or almost 1/5th an ounce of silver in each.
Silver quarters weigh 6.25 grams and are composed of 90% silver, 10% copper, with a total silver weight of 0.1808479 troy ounce pure silver.
How much silver is in a 1964 Washington quarter?
Regardless of condition, a Proof 1964 Washington quarter is made of 90% silver and has an actual silver weight of 0.1808 ounces.
How much is a 1965 silver quarter worth?
All pre-1965 silver quarters are silver coins containing 0.1808 troy ounces (6.25 grams) of physical silver weight and value. Older silver quarters are thus worth over 8000% more than their present-day cupro-nickel versions (over $3 a silver quarter melt value vs just over 3¢ in current quarter melt value).
What was the price of a 1964 US dollar coin?
The United States Mint had sold three million sets in each of the three proceeding years, but popular sentiment regarding the new coin design made 1964 a banner year for set sales. Speculators doubled down on organic demand, seeing the issue price of $2.10 as a low-cost-of-entry investment with huge potential upside.
Is the 1964 D quarter still in circulation?
In fact you can still find some in circulation- it’s rare but not impossible to find one of these coins in your change. This applies to both the 1964 quarters with no mint mark and the 1964 D quarters. These coins in circulated condition are worth at least their weight in silver.