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.
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.
Well, certainly at least 10 cents... It's probable you have an ordinary dime that was exposed to heat or chemicals. Another possibility is that it was plated for use in jewelry or something similar but the plating was poorly done or has worn off. Compare its weight with a normal dime. It should come in at roughly 2.27 gm.
Ten cents. It's not gold, it's been plated for use in jewelry or something similar. There's never been a gold dime.
$2.00 for the silver under the gold, the plating destroyed any collectible value the may have had.