actually hoarding every nickel you could get is much more likely to show a profit in say 5 years than buying numismatic coins. I could see them trading for double face value ( like copper pennies do) even if you can't legally melt them. The nickel has to change metals soon.
I'm not a nickel hoarder... so I search nickels like any other coins, look for keys and errors, and pull any silver alloy war nickels found, no matter how beat they look:
Other than silver, mintmarked 38s and 39s and the 50-D, I can't imagine the nickle being worth more than 6 cents. Of course when you've been collecting close to 50 years, you lose sight of coin scarcity for coins minted in your own lifetime
For me it's 1959. Ever since I was a kid that has seemed "old." I know they may not be worth any more but I still save those.
They are VERY rare. That's only my 3rd one found in the wild. Sorry, this was the only picture I had of this coin on my computer, and the arrows were to show the die crack in a different post.
Old enough to have a buffalo on it. I could probably link this thread with the other about least favorite set.
In the last 2-3 years, I've come across these two (barely visible dates) 1920 buffalo nickels in rolls of nickels bought from my bank: