
Well, that's the 50-cent question, isn't it? The short and boring answer is that a modern Canadian 50-cent coin is worth... 50 cents. Shocking, I know. You can use it to pay for exactly half of a dollar's worth of goods.
But that's no fun. The real answer is that it completely depends on the coin. As sites like Greysheet, which tracks coin values, can tell you, the worth of a Canadian half-dollar is a slippery fish. The value skyrockets based on its age, rarity, condition, and silver content. Many older coins, particularly those minted before 1968, contain silver, giving them an inherent value based on the current price of the metal.
If you have a coin from, say, 1870, you're not looking at two quarters anymore; you're looking at a genuine collector's item. A quick browse through a marketplace like eBay shows that these coins are actively traded, with prices ranging from a few bucks for a common, circulated coin to much, much more for rare and pristine examples.
So, while the one you get from the bank is just a 50-cent piece, the one hiding in your grandfather's old coin jar could be a pleasant surprise. It's worth taking a closer look at the date before you spend it.


