The value of the coin is 2 Euros. There are clues to the value in the first image, in particular the big “2” and the “EURO” after it.
For a coin to have a numismatic value above the face value it either needs to be special or in excellent condition. In this case the coin is common and the coins has suffered damage in circulation.
that is, it is not considered defective? interesting pros gathered.))))) success in deceiving the people
I already mentioned the possibility of it being a mint error (clipped planchet). I've looked and can find no sales of such a defect to estimate value. Insulting those trying to respond to you won't help.
forgive me. I don’t know English well, I use a translator, it doesn’t translate well. thanks for the communication. I think I have a good find. I really don’t know where it can be sold correctly. please tell me. Thank you
Thanks @rsirian1 for the link. This is very helpful for someone like me who has no knowledge on coins whatsoever.
What I do not understand is that back in 2012, it was a great find, like that Italian guy discovered America in 1492!! Fast forward 13 years, it is not (by most of the respondents here). Now it is only worth 2 euro. What has happened since then?
I did have a look at the same coin here and I can see that this coin is heavily circulated as the rough surface of the map of Europe is all gone.
I think a lot of the Numista members are worn out by the flood of “hey, look at this mint error coin, how much is it worth” posts from new members with a picture of a coin that somebody put in a hydraulic press and smashed the crap out of it. Every once in a while there are real mint errors posted that get overlooked. Clipped planchet error coins have a following and usually demand a decent value, not millions but more than face value, the more the clip the higher the value it seems.
I worked this up to convince myself that it could be a clipped planchet error.
I think a lot of the Numista members are worn out by the flood of “hey, look at this mint error coin, how much is it worth” posts from new members . Every once in a while there are real mint errors posted that get overlooked.
I worked this up to convince myself that it could be a clipped planchet error.
Bingo! Honestly I did not respond because I thought this was just another one of those erroneous error claims. You took the time and caught it. Clipped planchet to my eye as well. Value? I have no clue. Good catch and thanks for taking your time to recognize it.
everything is clear, but I didn’t understand anything. and this translator translates just about anything. One question: who might be interested in this coin, and what might the price be? It was the gpt chat that brought me to this site. hello from Kyiv thank you
Thanks to the experts. I'll look for someone who knows somewhere else. but I'll say this. I've had it for 10-15 years, maybe more. and it turns out that someone before this period pressed it out, sawed it off and inserted it back, throwing it into circulation. I'm lucky that she came to me. success to everyone in everything. hugged