About ten cents to a quarter at most, I reckon. I sold these (even the readably dated ones) in my 3/$1 bin at my antique mall coin booth ten years ago. In labeled 2x2 holders. You won't get rich off that, but it's still a handsome enough coin (aside from Franco's face).
The ones that are worth a little more than hardly anything are the 1947 pieces with "19" and "56" in the stars. And of course the ones issued for the 1951 numismatic exhibition which have an "E" and a "51", but those were not issued for circulation. Christian
I found a bunch of coins my family brought to the US when they immigrated from Cuba. I know they traveled to Spain in the 40's & 50's. One coin in particular is a 1947 una peseta with 19 in one star and 50 in the other. ChatGPT says it could be very valuable. Can anyone tell me if that's true?
I found a bunch of coins my family brought to the US when they immigrated from Cuba. I know they traveled to Spain in the 40's & 50's. One coin in particular is a 1947 una peseta with 19 in one star and 50 in the other. ChatGPT says it could be very valuable. Can anyone tell me if that's true?
From what I've seen ChatGPT is worthless for coin values. 1947 is the year of authorization and the numbers in the stars are the year minted. https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces785.html 1950 is a slightly lower mintage but I can't see where it's worth much of anything.
I agree with @KBBPLL …..: Don’t use AI to value coins. I saw one person post an electrical box slug that AI told him was worth hundreds. AI doesn’t have the ability to nuance the value of a coin…… But here’s the good news… You have landed on a website where you can get the information you seek….. Go to the top of the page and you should see a tab called “world coins”…. Start a unique thread there about your coin and you will get all kinds of good info.
It depends on its condition. My very old Krause lists it for $50 in XF. The last I checked on eBay there weren't many coins of this sort available.
A lot of the scarcer world moderns when found aren't in collections or even in the country of issue because they haven't been saved. They come from other countries because they were kept as a memento instead of as a collectible. The few coins available from the country of issue tend to be heavily worn and in deplorable condition and exist only because they were never turned into the bank when they were being gathered up to be melted. Some countries with very low tourism like East Germany have numerous tough coins. Since tourists saved most of the coins still in existence and they just kept whatever happened to be in their pockets it means VF and higher moderns can be very difficult and pristine examples almost impossible. In my experience this date is tough above VF and tougher with any luster. There's an unremarkable XF (-) on sale now on eBay for $150.