Ten cents.
The U.S. has never issued dimes in gold. For one thing, they'd be worth about $65! What you have is either:
> plated as part of a piece of jewelry or as a souvenir
> discolored due to exposure to heat or some chemical
Either way, it's considered to be an altered coin with no numismatic value.
Currently about $4 melt value. The value will rise depending on the date, condition, and mintmark. Silver dimes were made until 1965.
Its only 10 cents.
the value of a dime is ten cents
Because the value of it is worth half the value of a dime.
The value of one dime is 10 cents
The 1965 dime is a Roosevelt dime. This dime does not carry a mint mark and there were 1,652, 140,000 of them minted in the U.S. They have a value of between 10 cents and 2 dollars.
A 1965 sms dime has an average retail value of $2.00.
No. US Dimes dated 1965 and later, were all made from a copper-clad alloy. The dime you have is gold-plated.
Face value: 10 cents.
10 cents the date is common
U.S. dimes have never been made of gold, nor were there any gold coins minted in the 1960s. What you have is a gold-plated dime, not worth anything to collectors above face value.
Some coins do tone to a gold color or it may have been plated but it's not gold. So just spend it.
It's worth exactly 10 cents.
A gold-tinted dime from 1965 is likely not worth more than face value, as it is a common year and the tinting does not typically add significant value to the coin. To determine if it has any additional value, you may want to consult with a coin dealer or have it appraised by a professional.
It is gold plated and therefore is only worth what a normal (damaged) 1941 dime is worth, which is about $2.20 or so in scrap silver.
Ten cents. It's not gold, it's been plated for use in jewelry or something similar. There's never been a gold dime.
Your coin is worth face value only; hundreds of millions were minted. Note that the coin is simply a 1965 dime, not 1965-P. The P mint mark wasn't used on US dimes until 1980, and no US coins of any denomination had mint marks from 1965 to 1967.