It depends on what it is on, if it is gold on stainless steel or another base metal, not much, gold plating only puts a thin layer of gold on them, too little to be of any real value and requires costly removal to sell the gold. However, if it is gold plating over something like silver, it might have value, but rather for the sterling silver under the gold plating than for the gold plating.
Believe it or not some stainless flatwear can be quite expensive. It is a fast seller at many estate sales, and many silverwear sellers remarket it to replace lost pieces. Of course it depends on the manufacturer and grade (quality).
Its value is based only on the value of the metals it contains. A plated coin has no true numismatic value.
Not much. It is gold plated which means it is over a base metal and not gold.
The value of a set of 1947. Rogers Brothers flatware is dependent upon the condition of the flatware. The flatware can be worth as much as $1000 for a full set
Not much, there were a lot of Burger King collectibles sold like that, and gold plated items contain such an insignificant amount of gold to actually be worth much of anything.
Only the value of the metals used to make it.
This did not come from the mint like that. It has to be gold plated. No collector value.
18k gold plated jewelry is not worth much based on the gold amount. However, it could have design or sentimental value and be worth something to you.
Not much. Modified coins have no collector value.
Not much at all, and yes, the gold really has no value to be considered financially significant to calculate.
Modified coins have no collector value.
Gold-plated, not real gold. That makes it an altered coin with no real value to a collector.
It's only gold plated, which pretty much destroys any collector value it may have had. Value for silver it contains is about $13