Value in Good-4 is listed at $1.80. That looks environmental damaged/corroded and cleaned, so not much unfortunately.
Um, this coin wins no beauty contests, but @paddyman98 is being a tad harsh. Yes, it's a V-nickel with some surface issues. Starting from the $1.80 G4 (problem-free) value that @Lunchbox John posted, I'd say this one, after deducting for the problems, is worth anywhere between face value (5 cents) and 50 cents at best. Call it a 25-cent item, conservatively. Still worth a tad more than face value. After all, it's a 112-year-old nickel with a readable date, which counts for a little bit.
I see worse ones in the dollar bag at local coin shows. Then again, they tend to stay there, rather than selling. I'd agree with 25 to 50 cents. I'd pay that for it myself, if I didn't have quite so many already (I went a little nuts with Liberty-nickel lot auctions a few years ago...)
I find the $1.80 to be very high for a common date V nickel in G-4 (1900-1908, 1910-1912). If it were not mangled, I would be more in the $1 area. This coin is in bad shape and the maximum is .25-.50 cents as previously stated. And, in this case, .25 cents is correct.
OP, What kind of surface is that you are using ? Are you placing your coins in an iron skillet (looks like it to me) to take a picture ? That's not recommended as you will scratch the coin surfaces. For this particular coin it really doesn't matter but for ones in better shape it will. User black or white paper instead.
Why not carry it in your pocket for a year or two - let the gentle rub a dub dub against cotton and coins do its thing ?
I'm doing this with an ASE that was harshly cleaned. Apparently I'm doing it wrong, though -- after 3 or 4 years in my pocket, it's still no lower than mid-VF, and still unnaturally bright.
Won't hurt anything, but I doubt it will help anything either -- that's corrosion, not just debris, I'm pretty sure. VerdiCare would stop the ongoing damage, but it's probably not worthwhile. If you do clean it, pay close attention to how its appearance changes as you work on it. It can be a good learning experience.
You are right silver cleaner( liquid type) is NOT made for nickel, if that nickel is silver I really don't know. I don't collect nickels