1965 Nickel Coin Value Complete Guide: 7 No Mint Mark Errors Worth Hunting in Your Pocket Change Today

The 1965 nickel coin value depends largely on mint errors. Seven key errors to hunt include doubled dies (design elements appearing twice from double strikes), off-center strikes (misaligned coin images), and mint mark errors like doubled, inverted, or missing mint marks. Valuable specimens include the 2005 “speared bison” with die gouges, 1943 doubled die Jefferson nickels, and the famous 1937-D Buffalo nickel “three legs” error. The rare 1971 “No S” Jefferson nickel missing its San Francisco mint mark is particularly sought-after. War Nickels (1942-1945) containing 35% silver frequently display these errors. Coin roll hunting remains an effective method for discovering these valuable errors in pocket change today.

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8 Comments

    1. It is graded by NGC at a mintstate 64. So if you guys are new the coin grading scale goes up to 70 70 being the best condition. This is at a 64.

    1. Key nickel errors to look for include doubled dies, where design elements are doubled due to die strikes, off-center strikes, where the coin is struck outside its intended position, and mint mark errors, such as doubled or missing mint marks. Other valuable errors are speared bison on 2005 nickels, the 1943 double die Jefferson nickel, and 1937-D Buffalo nickel three legs.

    1. The other 90% of these 1965 nickels were made in 1966. And if that isn’t confusing. Enough it turns out that they did this with all the coins in 1965. So let’s talk about these nickels.

    1. The 1971 no-S Jefferson proof nickel is another valuable coin with no mint mark. These coins were only minted in San Francisco, but the rare no-S variety were struck without the mint mark. Only 200 no-S proof nickels are known to exist.

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