These coins are still potentially in circulation so, unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they are worth 20 Pence.
A British 1990 cupro-nickel 20 Pence coin (Elizabeth II)(Proof FDC), uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch up to £3 GBP.
A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
These coins are still potentially in circulation so, unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they are worth 20 Pence.
A British 1989 20 Pence coin (QE II)(Proof FDC), uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch up to £3 GBP.
A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
These coins are still potentially in circulation so, unless they are part of a Proof or uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they are worth 20 Pence.
A British 1989 cupro-nickel 20 Pence coin (heptagonal)(Elizabeth II)(Proof FDC), could fetch up to £3 GBP.
A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
A British 1985 cupro-nickel Twenty Pence coin (QE II)(Proof FDC), in absolute mint condition could fetch up to £2 GBP.
A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
These coins are still potentially in circulation so, unless they are part of a Proof or uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they are worth 20 Pence.
These coins are still potentially in circulation so, unless they are part of a Proof or uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they are worth 20 Pence.
A British 1988 cupro-nickel 20 Pence coin (Elizabeth II)(Proof FDC), uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch up to £3 GBP.
A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
There were no British 1979 20 Pence coins minted.
The British 20 Pence coin was first released in 1982.
The first British 20 Pence coin was issued in 1982.
There were no British 1975 25 Pence coins issued.
Such a coin does not exist. The British 20 Pence coin was first issued in 1985. They are heptagonal, not round.
Nobody was minting Threepences in 1971. The last general circulation British Threepence was minted in 1967.
It's still worth 20 pence, which currently converts to 26 cents in US dollars.
Yes. There were 89,518,750 British 20 Pence coins struck in 1997.
The British 20 Pence and 50 Pence coins are both heptagons.
The Royal Mint advises that 94,500,300 British 20 Pence coins were issued for 2009.
The older design 20 Pence coin has a Crowned Double Rose on the reverse. The newer design 20 Pence coin has a part of the composite design of the British Royal Shield.
No. Until the new design British 20 Pence coin first issued in 2008, the date was only ever on the reverse of the 20 Pence coin.