One nickel sold for $4,560,000. Another — a dateless Buffalo from your grandfather's change jar — is worth a dime. This guide identifies the rare nickels worth money across all four US five-cent series (Shield, Liberty Head, Buffalo, and Jefferson), explains exactly what drives value, and gives you the auction records and grade-by-grade prices to judge what you actually hold.
The most valuable rare nickels worth money are, in descending order of auction record: the 1913 Liberty Head Nickel ($4,560,000), the 1918/7-D Buffalo Nickel overdate ($350,750), the 1926-S Buffalo Nickel in Gem Uncirculated ($322,000), the 1916 Buffalo Doubled Die Obverse ($281,750), and the 1937-D 3-Legged Buffalo Nickel ($99,875 in MS66+). Below that tier, coins like the 1880 Shield Nickel business strike ($56,400 at auction in MS65), the 1885 Liberty Head Nickel ($10,500 in MS65), and the 1942-D Jefferson D over Horizontal D ($32,200) represent serious money. Even circulated examples of several of these dates start at $350 to $5,000 in well-worn condition.
For the vast majority of nickels found in drawers, jars, and inherited collections, the answer is face value — billions of modern Jefferson nickels circulate with no premium whatsoever. The genuine rarities require a combination of low mintage, historically high attrition rates, or a specific die error that was not caught for years. Any nickel you suspect may be a key date or major error should be examined by a professional grading service before any transaction. For the most current independent pricing by date and grade, visit Coins-Value.com.
Current Values
Values below synthesize data from the PCGS Price Guide, NGC Census records, and verified auction results from Heritage Auctions, Stack's Bowers, Legend Rare Coin Auctions, and GreatCollections. Rows are sorted by Gem Uncirculated (MS65+) value descending, consistent with the RARE angle's emphasis on peak market price. Retail prices generally run 20–40% above Greysheet wholesale bid. CAC-approved examples carry premiums of 30–50% above non-stickered comparable sales.
| Date / Variety | Good (G-4) | Fine (F-12) | Extremely Fine (XF-40) | Uncirculated (MS-60 to MS-63) | Gem Unc (MS-65+) | Auction Record |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1913 Liberty Head | insufficient data | insufficient data | insufficient data | insufficient data | Multimillion — 5 known | $4,560,000 (Aug 2018, Stack's Bowers, PR66) |
| 1918/7-D Buffalo (Overdate) | $925 | $1,595 | $2,950 | $52,500 | $350,750 (MS65 auction) | $350,750 (Aug 2006, Bowers & Merena, MS65) |
| 1926-S Buffalo | $99 | $80 | $600 | $5,875 | $66,000+ | $322,000 (Apr 2008, Bowers & Merena, MS66) |
| 1916 Buffalo (DDO) | $5,000 | $15,000 | $18,000 | $161,000 | $281,750 (MS64 auction) | $281,750 (Aug 2004, Bowers & Merena, MS64) |
| 1937-D Buffalo (3-Legged) | $350 | $919 | $1,500 | $3,678 | $26,840 | $99,875 (Oct 2021, Legend Rare Coin Auctions, MS66+ CAC) |
| 1867 Shield (With Rays Proof) | insufficient data | insufficient data | insufficient data | insufficient data | $78,200 (PR65 auction) | $78,200 (Jan 2008, Bowers & Merena, PR65) |
| 1914/3 Buffalo (Overdate) | $810 (VG-8) | $1,440 | $2,820 (MS62) | $5,280 | $37,500 | $63,250 (Jun 2002, Heritage Auctions, MS65) |
| 1880 Shield (Business Strike) | $500 | $730 | $1,400 | $4,300 | $8,300+ | $56,400 (Aug 2017, Stack's Bowers, MS65) |
| 1942-D Jefferson (D/Horiz D) | $35 | $60 | $132 | $2,090 | $32,200 (MS64 auction) | $32,200 (Jan 2006, Heritage Auctions, MS64) |
| 1912-S Liberty Head | $140 | $250 | $1,400 | $1,719 | $4,250 | $32,900 (Jul 2015, Stack's Bowers, MS66+) |
| 1939 Jefferson (Dbl Monticello) | $30 | $60 | $193 (AU) | $1,300 | $11,500 (MS67) | $23,500 (Sep 2019, Legend Rare Coin Auctions, MS67FS) |
| 1885 Liberty Head | $375 | $800 | $1,500 | $6,500 (MS64) | $10,500 | insufficient data |
| 1877 Shield (Proof Only) | $1,200 | $1,700 | $2,400 | $3,000 | $3,700 | insufficient data |
| 1971 No S Proof Jefferson | insufficient data | insufficient data | insufficient data | insufficient data | $1,000 (PR66) | $8,100 (May 2023, Heritage Auctions, PR69DCAM) |
| 1883 Shield (3 over 2) | $270 | $700 | $1,300 | $2,300 | $3,000+ | insufficient data |
| 1886 Liberty Head | $86 | $125 | $220 | $1,750 (MS62) | $5,500 | insufficient data |
| 1913-S Buffalo (Type 2) | $160 | $378 | $550 | $1,595 | $3,413 | insufficient data |
| 1943-P Jefferson (3 over 2) | $20 | $35 | $79 | $250 | $1,186 (MS66) | insufficient data |
| 1950-D Jefferson | $11 (VF) | $12 (VF) | $19 (AU) | $24 (MS64) | $39 | insufficient data |
Cells marked 'insufficient data' reflect the dossier-cited sources' absence of a verified price at that grade tier — typically because the coin is a Proof-only issue that does not trade in circulated condition, or because no documented public auction exists for that combination. For complete grade-by-grade pricing on every rare US nickel, Coins-Value.com's rare US five-cent coins reference is the most current independent source.
Historical Context
The United States five-cent piece dates to 1866, not as the nation's first five-cent denomination, but as its replacement. The original five-cent coin was the silver half dime. The Civil War's economic disruption triggered widespread hoarding of precious metals, stripping silver from everyday commerce entirely. Congress responded by authorizing a base-metal five-cent coin struck in 75% copper and 25% nickel — a metallurgical formula that has remained essentially unchanged for over 150 years, interrupted only by World War II.
The Shield Nickel (1866–1883), designed by Chief Engraver James B. Longacre, immediately revealed a fundamental problem: the new copper-nickel alloy was extraordinarily hard on dies. The initial 1866 design featured rays between the stars on the reverse, and the die breakage was severe enough that the Mint removed the rays partway through 1867, creating an instant variety. All Shield nickels were struck exclusively in Philadelphia, so no mint marks appear anywhere in the series.
Charles E. Barber's Liberty Head Nickel (1883–1913) — universally called the 'V Nickel' for the Roman numeral on the reverse — launched with a famous blunder. The first issues omitted the word 'CENTS,' and because the coin approximated the diameter of the five-dollar gold half eagle, fraudsters gold-plated and reeded the edges of nickels to pass them as $5 coins. The Mint corrected the omission within the same year. The series was struck almost entirely in Philadelphia until 1912, when Denver and San Francisco each produced a small quantity — setting up two of the series' key dates.
James Earle Fraser's Buffalo Nickel (1913–1938) is widely regarded as one of the finest American coin designs. The obverse is a composite portrait of three Native American chiefs; the reverse depicts a bison modeled after 'Black Diamond' of the Central Park Zoo. The Type 1 design placed 'FIVE CENTS' on a raised mound that wore away almost immediately, prompting a Type 2 revision with the inscription recessed. Branch-mint strikes of the 1920s were notoriously weak, leaving the date and the bison's horn — both on the design's highest relief points — prone to disappearing entirely in circulation.
Felix Schlag's Jefferson Nickel (1938–present) brought the denomination into the modern era, pairing a portrait of the third President with his Monticello estate. The series holds a unique wartime chapter: from mid-1942 through 1945, nickel was designated a critical war material, and the Mint shifted to a 56% copper, 35% silver, 9% manganese alloy. Massive mint marks above Monticello — including, for the first time in US history, a 'P' for Philadelphia — identified these 'War Nickels' for post-war retrieval. Collectors today hunt the Jefferson series primarily for the 'Full Steps' designation, confirming five or six unbroken steps at the base of Monticello on the reverse.
The Key Dates
The entries below are sorted by peak auction value — from the single most expensive nickel ever sold down through key dates realistically attainable for under $1,000 in circulated condition. Mintage figures come from PCGS CoinFacts, Stack's Bowers reference data, and the NGC Census. Retail prices typically run 20% to 40% above the Greysheet wholesale bid; auction results represent the realized retail ceiling.
No nickel — and few American coins of any denomination — approaches the cultural and financial gravity of the 1913 Liberty Head. After the Buffalo nickel was approved for production, a Mint employee struck five examples of a Liberty Head nickel bearing the new date, without official authorization. The coins surfaced publicly in 1920 and have traded in the multimillion-dollar range ever since, with the most recent major auction result of $4,560,000 achieved at Stack's Bowers in August 2018 for the specimen formerly known as the 'ANA Specimen,' pedigreed to the collections of Col. E.H.R. Green and J.V. McDermott.
All five known specimens are fully documented, pedigreed, and held in named collections or institutions. Any 1913-dated Liberty Head nickel found outside those five documented coins is almost certainly an altered 1903 or 1910. The designation is applied almost exclusively in the PCGS PR66 tier for the finest known; the coin does not trade in circulated grades in any conventional sense.
For decades, the 1918/7-D held the title of most valuable error in the Buffalo series. A master die mix-up resulted in a bold '7' hiding directly beneath the '8' in the date. Because the error went undetected until the 1930s, virtually the entire mintage entered heavy commerce. The result is a coin that is, by definition, common in worn grades — $925 in Good condition — but approaches the impossible in Gem Uncirculated. A PCGS MS65 realized $350,750 at Bowers & Merena in August 2006.
Genuine examples must show a specific, tilted 'D' mint mark that leans toward the left. The 'D' orientation is a die-level diagnostic that scammers altering common 1918-D pieces cannot replicate. Authentication by PCGS or NGC is mandatory for any transaction above $500.
The 1926-S holds an uncomfortable distinction: it is simultaneously findable in heavily worn grades for under $100, and it is one of the most expensive regular-issue nickels a collector can attempt to acquire in Gem Uncirculated condition. The San Francisco Mint operated with chronically low striking pressure throughout the 1920s, meaning that virtually no 1926-S nickels left the press with fully struck horn, tail, and high-relief details. A PCGS MS66 realized $322,000 at Bowers & Merena in April 2008, reflecting the near-impossibility of finding a sharply struck survivor.
A circulated 1926-S in Fine grades can be purchased for roughly $80, making it approachable for set builders. The exponential leap to $66,000 for an MS65 is not marketing — it reflects a genuine absence of fully struck Gem Uncirculated survivors from a die set that was simply not up to the task.
The 1916 DDO is the premier doubled die in US nickel history, and one of the most dramatic in all of American numismatics. A rotational misalignment during hubbing produced drastic, naked-eye doubling shifted toward the southeast. The date '1916,' the chief's lips, chin, and throat are all dramatically doubled — no magnification is required to see the error. PCGS estimates approximately 400 survivors across all grades, with perhaps only 10 existing in Uncirculated condition. An MS64 realized $281,750 at Bowers & Merena in August 2004.
The practical price floor is extraordinarily high for a coin this famous: a Good-4 specimen brings roughly $5,000. The doubling is undeniable even on heavily worn examples, which drives demand at every grade level. CAC-approved examples carry an additional premium of 30% to 50% above non-stickered comparable sales.
The 3-Legged Buffalo is the most famous abraded-die error in American coinage. In 1937, a reverse die was damaged by clash marks (the dies striking each other without a planchet between them). A press operator over-polished the die to remove the damage, inadvertently grinding away the bison's entire front right leg while leaving the hoof resting on the ground. The result — a three-legged bison — is immediately recognizable and has driven intense collector demand since the error's discovery. Circulated examples bring $350 to $1,500; an MS66+ with CAC approval realized $99,875 at Legend Rare Coin Auctions in October 2021, and that coin is the official PCGS CoinFacts plate coin.
Because the premium is well known, a massive number of standard 1937-D nickels have had the front leg filed off by scammers. The genuine abraded die left specific diagnostics that forgeries lack.
Mint Director Archibald Loudon Snowden ordered just 16,000 business strikes in 1880 specifically to avoid creating another Proof-only year. The irony is that in doing so, he created the lowest-mintage circulation coin of the entire Shield series — and one where high-grade uncirculated business strikes are actually rarer than the Proof counterparts from the same year. A PCGS MS65 business strike realized $56,400 at Stack's Bowers in August 2017.
Distinguishing a sharply struck business strike from an impaired circulated Proof is genuinely difficult without third-party certification. The copper-nickel alloy of the era is also prone to dark, porous environmental degradation, meaning surviving high-grade examples with original surfaces are far scarcer than the mintage alone suggests.
The 'With Rays' reverse design was discontinued early in 1867 due to severe die damage from the hard copper-nickel alloy. While business strikes with rays are relatively common, the Mint produced an unrecorded and tiny number of Proofs before the design change — estimated at fewer than 75. A PCGS PR65 realized $78,200 at Bowers & Merena in January 2008. This is the ultimate prize for advanced Shield nickel specialists.
The coin exhibits deeply mirrored fields and squared rims typical of Proof strikes, with rays clearly present between the stars on the reverse. Authentication is mandatory — the combination of extreme rarity and high value makes it a target for counterfeiting.
No circulation strikes were produced in 1877 due to an oversupply of base-metal coinage. Every surviving 1877 Shield nickel is a Proof, required for any complete series registry set. Values range from $1,200 in Good condition (a Proof coin that has seen rough handling) through $3,700 in Gem Proof at MS65 equivalent. Authentication is mandatory — the coin's status as a required set piece means prooflike counterfeits circulate in the market.
Despite having only the second-lowest mintage in the Liberty series, the 1885 is the practical 'stopper' for completing a business-strike set. The coin was heavily circulated and largely ignored by contemporary hoarders, leaving an attrition rate that reduced the surviving population to roughly 5,000 examples across all grades. Values range from $375 in Good condition through $10,500 in MS65.
Because the premium is substantial, date alteration is common — scammers most frequently shave down and re-engrave an 1883 or 1888. Genuine 1885 nickels feature a slight, specific bulge on the lower-left obverse near Liberty's neck, caused by the master die — a diagnostic that altered coins cannot replicate.
Until 1989, mint marks were struck into working dies by hand. At the Denver Mint in 1942, a punch was initially applied completely sideways before being corrected to upright — creating a die where a horizontal 'D' protrudes from behind the primary upright 'D' next to Monticello. A PCGS MS64 realized $32,200 at Heritage Auctions in January 2006, reflecting the coin's status as the most extreme repunched mint mark in the modern Jefferson series.
Circulated examples are affordable at $35 to $132 in grades up to Extremely Fine, making this a realistic target for variety collectors. The error escalates sharply in Uncirculated condition due to the PCGS population estimate of fewer than 100 surviving Mint State examples.
A 1913-dated master die was accidentally repunched with a 1914 hub, sending the majority of the resulting coins into heavy commercial circulation before the error was understood. The remnants of the '3' — specifically the upper bar and the rounded lower loop — protrude visibly beneath the '4'. A PCGS MS65 realized $63,250 at Heritage Auctions in June 2002.
Heavily worn examples in VG8 begin around $810, making the 1914/3 attainable in circulated grades for dedicated series collectors. The exponential jump to $37,500 or more in Gem Uncirculated reflects the degree to which most specimens entered commerce without a second look from anyone.
The 1912-S is the lowest-mintage circulation strike in the Liberty Head series, produced entirely in the final week of 1912. Values range from $140 in Good condition through $4,250 in MS65. A PCGS MS66+ from the Douglas C. Kaselitz Collection, richly toned in gold and apricot, realized $32,900 at Stack's Bowers in July 2015.
An important caveat governs the MS66 tier: between 1986 and 2012, the PCGS MS66 population was just eight coins, with one example commanding $37,375. As the population expanded to nearly 50 coins by 2017 — partially from original rolls entering the market and aggressive resubmissions — MS66 auction values plummeted over 90% to roughly $3,525. Population reports from PCGS and NGC are essential reading before bidding on any high-grade example.
The 1886 is a classic semi-key date. Mint State examples are highly elusive, and the issue is notorious for poor striking quality — most uncirculated survivors show weakness that prevents them from reaching Gem status. Values range from $86 in Good through $5,500 in MS65. The moderate value floor and upper-grade scarcity make it a respectable target for Liberty series collectors on a budget.
Cast counterfeits are prevalent. Genuine specimens feature an elegant font with varied character thickness on the obverse lettering, and 'LIBERTY' on the coronet must be incuse into the metal — not raised. Weight checks (the genuine coin is 5.0 grams) catch many crude fakes.
The 1921-S shares the chronic striking problem of its San Francisco contemporaries. Much of the mintage was weakly struck, making fully detailed pieces exceedingly rare. High-grade uncirculated examples represent a massive jump in value. The date is often completely worn away on circulated examples — a common condition for this issue. Standard Type 2 design with the 'S' mint mark under 'FIVE CENTS.'
Like the 1921-S, the 1924-S suffers from severe striking weakness, particularly on the buffalo's head and horn, which appear mushy even on technically Mint State examples. The absence of fully struck survivors drives premium prices at the top end of the grade scale, with the highest examples reaching over $100,000. This is another coin where condition rarity far outweighs mintage rarity.
The Type 2 modification placed the denomination in a protective recess, addressing the rapid wear of the Type 1 raised-mound design. The San Francisco Type 2 from 1913 carries a relatively low mintage combined with a high attrition rate, making Gem Uncirculated grades exceptionally scarce. Values range from $160 in Good through $3,413 in MS65. The 'S' mint mark sits cleanly beneath the recessed 'FIVE CENTS' on the reverse.
Like the 1877, the 1878 Shield nickel was produced exclusively as Proofs for collectors, with no circulation strikes authorized. Its status as a required set piece sustains steady demand from registry-set builders. Sharp details and deeply mirrored fields differentiate it from heavily polished circulation strikes of adjacent years — but third-party certification is still required to confirm the designation.
A leftover 1882 working die was repunched with an 1883 logotype to save materials during the transition to the Liberty Head design. The rounded upper curve and straight bottom base of the underlying '2' are clearly visible within the '3.' Values range from $270 in Good through $3,000 or more in MS65, placing it well within reach for variety collectors at most grade levels.
Drastic doubling is evident on the reverse inscriptions 'MONTICELLO' and 'FIVE CENTS,' representing the most famous reverse doubling in the modern nickel series. Values range from $30 in Good through $11,500 in MS67. A PCGS MS67 Full Steps example — combining the doubled die reverse with pristine preservation and a flawless strike — realized $23,500 at Legend Rare Coin Auctions in September 2019.
During the wartime silver composition era, a working die carried the vestiges of a '2' inside the lower loop of the '3.' This stands as one of the few recognized overdates in modern US coinage and is unique in occurring on the 35% silver 'War Nickel' composition. Values range from $20 in Good condition through $1,186 in MS66. The large 'P' mint mark above Monticello confirms the silver alloy.
The 1971 No S is the only proof nickel from any year to completely omit its required 'S' mint mark. A proof die was not punched with the mint mark before being installed in the press, and an estimated 1,655 examples escaped into proof sets before the error was caught. A PCGS PR69 Deep Cameo realized $8,100 at Heritage Auctions in May 2023. The PR66 level trades around $1,000.
The coin must exhibit proof finish — mirror fields and frosted devices — and must be dated 1971 with no mint mark of any kind near the date on the obverse. Deep Cameo finish was not standard on 1971 proofs, making high-contrast examples with the missing mint mark particularly prized.
The 1950-D has the lowest mintage of any regular-issue Jefferson nickel. Its low production was publicized almost immediately, triggering massive speculative hoarding through the 1950s and 1960s — pushing the price to an astonishing $25 per coin by 1964. As a result, most survivors today are in Mint State, but finding examples with fully struck steps on Monticello remains challenging. Current values are modest by key-date standards: $11 to $12 in VF, $19 in AU, and only $39 in MS65. The hoarding story makes it a historically fascinating date even if the current price ceiling is modest.
Certain nickels appear regularly in social-media 'valuable coins' videos without the price reality to back the claim. Honest framing benefits readers more than perpetuating the hype.
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Mint Errors and Die Varieties
Die errors and striking anomalies account for the highest per-coin values in the nickel series — often exceeding the prices of low-mintage key dates by an order of magnitude. Every error coin above $300 in value should be authenticated by PCGS or NGC before any transaction. The market for counterfeited 3-Legged Buffalos and filed-date 1916 DDO pieces is well developed and predatory.
A rotational misalignment during the hubbing of a working die produced drastic, naked-eye doubling shifted toward the southeast. The date '1916,' the feathers, and the chief's chin, throat, and lips are all heavily doubled. PCGS estimates roughly 400 examples survive across all grades, with approximately 10 in Uncirculated condition. This scarcity across the grade spectrum establishes an unusually high price floor: even a Good-4 specimen brings around $5,000.
CAC-approved examples regularly sell for 30% to 50% above comparable non-stickered sales. Because the doubling is so dramatic and so well documented, any claimed 1916 DDO that requires significant magnification to see should be regarded with suspicion — genuine examples are immediately obvious to the naked eye.
The most famous abraded die error in American numismatics. After severe clash marks damaged a reverse die in 1937, a press operator over-polished the lower right section of the die, completely removing the bison's front right leg. Crucially, the hoof of the missing leg remained, floating on the ground — a detail that separates genuine error coins from the large number of standard 1937-D nickels that fraudsters have filed to simulate the error.
The genuine die left a characteristic set of diagnostics: a jagged, raised die-rust line (popularly called the 'urinating buffalo' line) running beneath the bison's belly between the missing leg position and the rear leg, die rust pocking at the nape of the Native American's neck, and a weakened, rough-surfaced rear right leg. Scammers cannot replicate these die-specific features, making authentication straightforward for experienced eyes — but PCGS or NGC grading is still strongly recommended for any transaction above $500.
A master die error — a 1917-dated die was repunched with a 1918 hub — sent virtually the entire affected mintage into heavy commerce before collectors discovered the overdate in the 1930s, thirteen years after the coins were struck. The result is a coin where circulated examples are scarce but attainable at $925 in Good condition, while Gem Uncirculated survivors are among the rarest coins in the denomination.
Authentication centers on two points: the visible '7' beneath the '8' in the date, and the specific tilt of the 'D' mint mark. The genuine overdate die produced a 'D' that leans leftward — a die-level characteristic that an altered standard 1918-D cannot replicate. Any 1918-D with an upright, standard-position 'D' mint mark should be examined very carefully before accepting an overdate attribution.
Until 1989, mint employees hand-punched mint marks into working dies using a mallet and a small metal punch. At Denver in 1942, a punch was applied completely sideways before being corrected to the upright position. The resulting die produced coins where a clearly visible horizontal 'D' protrudes from behind the primary upright 'D' on the reverse. PCGS estimates fewer than 100 examples survive in Uncirculated condition, making this the most dramatic repunched mint mark in the modern Jefferson series.
Circulated examples in Fine grades are relatively accessible at $60, making the 1942-D D/Horizontal D a realistic target for variety collectors at most budget levels. The premium accelerates sharply above MS60, reflecting the very thin population of Uncirculated survivors.
During the wartime silver composition era, a working die retained vestiges of a '2' inside the lower loop of the '3.' This is one of the few documented overdates in modern US coinage, and its occurrence on the 35% silver War Nickel composition gives it additional historical context. The large 'P' mint mark above Monticello — first used in US history during the War Nickel years — confirms the silver alloy. Values are modest by series standards, ranging from $20 in Good condition through $1,186 in MS66, but the combination of silver composition, a recognizable overdate, and modern-era status makes it a popular variety.
In 1953, Francis LeRoy Henning produced an estimated half-million counterfeit nickels dated 1939, 1944, 1946, 1947, and 1953 from a Monel metal alloy in Erial, New Jersey. His critical error was forging 1944-dated coins — War Nickels — without adding the large 'P', 'D', or 'S' mint mark above Monticello required for the silver alloy. Any 1944 nickel lacking that large overdate mint mark is almost certainly a Henning fake. Additional diagnostics include an overweight parameter (roughly 5.40 grams versus the official 5.0 grams) and a void or hole in the left leg of the 'R' in 'PLURIBUS.'
Henning nickels are illegal to produce but are openly collected as historical artifacts and typically trade between $50 and $100. They are not rare nickels worth money in a numismatic premium sense — they are interesting counterfeits with a well-documented criminal backstory.
Occasionally, blanks intended for other denominations become mixed in the coin press hoppers. A documented example is a 1980 Jefferson Nickel struck on a one-cent copper planchet. Because the cent blank is smaller and lighter than a nickel planchet, the coin appears undersized, displays the copper color immediately, and has lettering sheared off by the collar edge. Such dramatic off-metal errors require PCGS or NGC authentication and regularly realize $1,000 to $1,700 in high Uncirculated grades.
Authentication
As values for conditionally rare nickels have climbed into five- and six-figure territory, the sophistication of counterfeiting and date alteration has kept pace. Three categories account for most of the fraud in this denomination: altered-date Liberty Head nickels, filed-leg 3-Legged Buffalo fakes, and added or removed mint marks. PCGS and NGC grading is the single most reliable safeguard against overpaying.
In the Liberty Head series, the 1885 and 1886 are most frequently targeted for date alteration — typically from an 1883 or 1888 donor coin. Genuine 1885 Liberty Head nickels possess a slight, specific bulge on the lower-left obverse near Liberty's neck, a master-die artifact that cannot be replicated on an altered coin. For the 1886, the word 'LIBERTY' on the coronet must be incuse into the metal; crude counterfeits sometimes feature raised lettering. Both series are also susceptible to weight manipulation — genuine coins weigh 5.0 grams, and most fakes deviate measurably.
The 1912-S Liberty Head is targeted by mint mark addition. Because the 1912 Philadelphia issue had a mintage of over 26 million, fraudsters solder or glue a fake 'S' onto the reverse. Under magnification, look for a visible seam around the base of the mint mark, discoloration from applied heat, or incorrect font serifs compared to a known genuine example. The NGC counterfeit detection library documents the specific 'S' font used on genuine 1912-S coins.
In the Buffalo series, the 3-Legged error is the primary target. A large number of standard 1937-D nickels have had the front right leg ground off. The genuine abraded die left die-rust diagnostics — the 'urinating buffalo' line, neck rust, and rough rear leg — that a filed common coin cannot replicate. The hoof of the missing leg must also remain intact; scammers who file off the leg typically destroy the hoof in the process, immediately revealing the forgery.
PCGS and NGC both offer Economy and Standard submission tiers. Current economy tier fees (as of the dossier publication period) run in the $30 to $50 range per coin for lower-value items, scaling upward for higher-value submissions. The economic calculus is straightforward: if the coin is worth more than roughly $300 raw, the cost of certification is a small fraction of the transaction value — and the grading company's guarantee protects both buyer and seller.
| Coin value (raw) | Slabbing economic? | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Under $50 | No | Hold raw or sell to a dealer at face value. Submission fees exceed the coin's value. |
| $50–$300 | Marginal | Consider only if the coin is a known key date or variety — authentication value alone may justify the fee. |
| $300–$2,000 | Yes | Submit to PCGS or NGC. Grading guarantee protects the transaction; buyers of key dates demand it. |
| Over $2,000 | Essential | Never sell or buy raw above this level. For MS65+ examples, also submit to CAC after slabbing. |
Coins returned with a 'Genuine — Cleaned' or 'Genuine — Details' designation are worth a fraction of their straight-graded counterparts. Cleaning destroys the original mint luster and natural patina that graders and collectors prize. A 'Details' coin should be sold as-is and never re-cleaned in the hope of removing the designation — further cleaning only compounds the damage.
The copper-nickel alloy used in most US nickels develops a distinctive original skin over decades — a natural patina that experienced collectors and graders recognize immediately. On Shield nickels, this often manifests as dark gray or steel-blue toning; on Buffalo nickels, as rich chocolate brown on the high relief points. Abrasive cleaning strips this patina and replaces it with bright, unnatural surfaces that graders identify instantly.
PCGS and NGC will not assign a standard numerical grade to a cleaned coin. The 'Cleaned' or 'Details' designation dramatically reduces liquidity and value — a cleaned 1926-S that might have been a $5,000 to $15,000 coin in Fine or Extremely Fine condition may trade for $200 or less in a 'Cleaned' details holder. Chemical dipping, polish, or even a soft cloth rub across the surfaces can trigger the designation. If you have a potentially valuable nickel, leave the surfaces entirely alone.
The Auction Record
The nickel market's upper tier is dominated by a small number of dramatic coins: the unique 1913 Liberty Head, condition rarities from the notoriously weak San Francisco Buffalo dies, and spectacular die errors with documented survival rates in the double digits. The records below come from Heritage Auctions, Stack's Bowers, Bowers & Merena, and Legend Rare Coin Auctions — all cited in PCGS CoinFacts and the dossier-cited sources.
| Date | Coin | Grade / Holder | Price | Auction House | Provenance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aug 2018 | 1913 Liberty Head Nickel | PCGS PR66 | $4,560,000 | Stack's Bowers | Ex-Col. E.H.R. Green; ex-J.V. McDermott; 'ANA Specimen' |
| Aug 2006 | 1918/7-D Buffalo Nickel Overdate | PCGS MS65 | $350,750 | Bowers & Merena | insufficient data |
| Apr 2008 | 1926-S Buffalo Nickel | PCGS MS66 | $322,000 | Bowers & Merena | insufficient data |
| Aug 2004 | 1916 Buffalo Nickel Doubled Die Obverse | PCGS MS64 | $281,750 | Bowers & Merena | insufficient data |
| Oct 2021 | 1937-D 3-Legged Buffalo Nickel | PCGS MS66+ CAC | $99,875 | Legend Rare Coin Auctions | PCGS CoinFacts plate coin; vibrant violet and gold toning |
| Jan 2008 | 1867 Shield Nickel (With Rays Proof) | PCGS PR65 | $78,200 | Bowers & Merena | insufficient data |
| Jun 2002 | 1914/3 Buffalo Nickel Overdate | PCGS MS65 | $63,250 | Heritage Auctions | insufficient data |
| Aug 2017 | 1880 Shield Nickel (Business Strike) | PCGS MS65 | $56,400 | Stack's Bowers | Denver Auction |
| Jul 2015 | 1912-S Liberty Head Nickel | PCGS MS66+ | $32,900 | Stack's Bowers | Douglas C. Kaselitz Collection; Lot 5095; gold and apricot toning |
| Jan 2006 | 1942-D Jefferson Nickel D over Horizontal D | PCGS MS64 | $32,200 | Heritage Auctions | insufficient data |
| Sep 2019 | 1939 Jefferson Nickel Doubled Monticello | PCGS MS67FS | $23,500 | Legend Rare Coin Auctions | insufficient data |
| May 2023 | 1971 No S Jefferson Nickel (Proof) | PCGS PR69DCAM | $8,100 | Heritage Auctions | insufficient data |
Myth vs Reality
Social-media coin videos and clickbait listicles have created a durable mythology around US nickels — one that consistently inflates common-date values and misidentifies ordinary coins as rarities. The corrections below come directly from PCGS CoinFacts, NGC Census data, and verified auction records.
Action Steps
The path from 'I found an interesting nickel' to 'I got paid fairly for it' has predictable steps. Most inherited collections contain one or two genuinely interesting dates alongside dozens of common pieces. The workflow below is designed to help you spend your time and money in the right order.
Separate your nickels by design type: Shield (1866–1883), Liberty Head / 'V' Nickel (1883–1913), Buffalo (1913–1938), Jefferson (1938–present). Within the Buffalo series, look immediately for the five dates that drive almost all the value: 1913-S Type 2, 1916 (check for obvious doubling without magnification), 1918-D, 1921-S, 1924-S, 1926-S, and 1937-D. On Jefferson nickels, check for War Nickel status (large mint mark above Monticello, 1942–1945) and look for the 1950-D, 1939-D, and the 1971 proof set for the No-S variety.
For any coin you cannot confidently identify, photograph the obverse and reverse and run it through the Assay app. The AI returns per-field confidence labels and flags counterfeit risk for high-value coins like the 1937-D 3-Legged Buffalo. Manual Lookup — permanently free and fully offline — lets you cascade through Country, Denomination, Year, and Design without a subscription. Either path delivers the same four-bucket valuation and Keep/Sell/Grade verdict.
For any Buffalo nickel dated 1916, examine the date and the chief's features without magnification first — genuine 1916 DDO doubling is naked-eye visible. For suspected 3-Legged Buffalos, check the hoof (must remain), the belly line, and the nape of the neck under a jeweler's loupe. For Liberty Head nickels dated 1885, examine the lower-left obverse for the master die bulge. Do not clean or handle the coin's surfaces while doing this.
Any nickel you believe is worth more than $300 should go to PCGS or NGC before any transaction. The authentication guarantee from either service eliminates counterparty risk for both buyer and seller. Economy tier submissions cover most common key dates; higher-value coins (above $2,000) should be submitted at a tier that includes the grading company's financial guarantee. After receiving a straight-grade slab, consider CAC submission for MS65 or better examples — CAC approval typically adds 30% to 50% at auction.
Selling channel choice has a direct impact on realized price. For a circulated common key date worth $100 to $500, a local dealer offers convenience at roughly 60% to 70% of guide value. GreatCollections works well for certified mid-tier coins ($200 to $5,000) where the buyer pool is broader than a local shop. Heritage Auctions or Stack's Bowers are the right venues for coins worth $5,000 or more — their collector base and catalog prestige drive competitive bidding that local venues cannot match.
For complete grade-by-grade pricing on any U.S. coin, Coins-Value.com maintains the most comprehensive independent value reference available, with 20,000+ U.S. and Canadian coin entries. Check the current price guide for your specific date and grade before accepting any dealer offer or setting an eBay reserve — values shift as population reports change, particularly for top-grade examples of issues like the 1912-S Liberty Head.
Frequently Asked
The 1913 Liberty Head Nickel holds the record at $4,560,000, realized at Stack's Bowers in August 2018 for a PCGS PR66 specimen pedigreed to the collections of Col. E.H.R. Green and J.V. McDermott. Only five examples of this coin are known to exist; they were struck clandestinely by a Mint employee after the Buffalo nickel design was approved and never officially authorized. All five are accounted for and in named collections.
Three diagnostics distinguish the genuine error from a filed fake: first, the hoof of the missing front right leg must remain intact on the ground — scammers who file the leg off usually destroy the hoof; second, look for a jagged die-rust line (called the 'urinating buffalo' line) running beneath the bison's belly between the missing leg position and the rear leg; third, check for die rust pocking at the nape of the Native American's neck on the obverse. Professional authentication by PCGS or NGC is strongly recommended for any transaction.
War Nickels contain 35% silver and are easily identified by the large mint mark (P, D, or S) placed above Monticello's dome on the reverse. In circulated condition, their value is primarily the silver melt — roughly $1.40 to $1.60 per coin at common silver prices. They are not rare nickels in a numismatic sense in circulated grades; their value is tied to the silver market rather than collector demand, unless the specific coin exhibits an authenticated error or is in exceptional Uncirculated condition.
The 1916 DDO resulted from a rotational misalignment during the hubbing of a working die, producing drastic naked-eye doubling on the date and the chief's facial features. PCGS estimates roughly 400 survivors across all grades, with approximately 10 in Uncirculated condition. The combination of extreme scarcity, immediately visible error, and heavy collector demand creates a price floor of roughly $5,000 even for heavily worn Good-4 examples — an unusual situation where even the lowest grades command serious money.
Between 1986 and 2012, the PCGS MS66 population for the 1912-S was just eight coins, with one example selling for $37,375. When the population expanded to nearly 50 coins by 2017 — driven by original rolls entering the market and aggressive resubmissions of the same coins — the auction value of an MS66 collapsed by over 90% to roughly $3,525. This illustrates a critical principle: population reports from PCGS and NGC directly determine upper-tier values for any coin, and those reports change.
The 1950-D has the lowest mintage of any regular-issue Jefferson nickel (2,630,030), but its scarcity was publicized immediately, triggering massive public hoarding. As a result, most surviving 1950-D nickels are in Mint State today. Current values are modest: $11 to $12 in VF, $19 in AU, and only $39 in MS65. It is historically interesting but not a high-value coin in the grades that owners typically hold.
Henning Nickels are counterfeit US nickels produced illegally by Francis LeRoy Henning in 1953, dated 1939, 1944, 1946, 1947, and 1953. His most identifiable error was striking 1944-dated coins — which should be silver War Nickels with a large mint mark — without the required 'P', 'D', or 'S' above Monticello. Additional diagnostics include an overweight of roughly 5.40 grams and a void in the left leg of the 'R' in 'PLURIBUS.' Although counterfeit, they are openly collected as historical artifacts and typically sell for $50 to $100.
Never clean a coin before appraisal or sale. Cleaning strips the original mint luster and natural patina that graders and collectors prize, and PCGS and NGC will assign a 'Cleaned' or 'Details' designation that dramatically reduces market value. A cleaned 1926-S or 1885 Liberty Head may be worth 80% to 95% less than an original-surface example of the same date. Leave all surfaces entirely alone.
Full Steps (FS) is a designation applied by PCGS and NGC to Jefferson nickels exhibiting five or six fully separated, unbroken horizontal lines at the base of Monticello on the reverse. It confirms an exceptionally sharp strike from fresh dies. The FS designation can increase the value of a high-grade Uncirculated example exponentially — a standard MS65 1939 Jefferson may bring $1,300, while an MS67FS of the same date can exceed $23,500 at auction.
The mint mark on a Buffalo nickel is on the reverse side, directly beneath the words 'FIVE CENTS' at the bottom center. A blank space means Philadelphia; 'D' indicates Denver; 'S' indicates San Francisco. No mint marks appear on Shield nickels (all struck at Philadelphia). On Jefferson nickels from 1938 to 1964 and 1968 to the present, the mint mark is on the reverse to the right of Monticello; on War Nickels (1942–1945), the large mint mark appears above Monticello's dome.
Independent numismatic reference focused on the rarest US five-cent coins across the Shield, Liberty Head, Buffalo, and Jefferson series. Values verified against PCGS Price Guide, NGC Price Guide, Greysheet CPG, and recent realized prices at Heritage Auctions, Stack's Bowers, and GreatCollections. We do not buy, sell, or appraise coins ourselves — we exist as a free public reference for owners trying to determine what they have. Read our full methodology →