1966 (US) dimes are not silver but are copper-nickel and commonly come up in circulation. Unless it is in a mint set, it is only worth 10 cents. Even uncirculated examples outside of mint sets carry little to no premium and little collector demand.
10 cents.
10 cents unless in a mint set. It is in common circulation and made out of copper-nickel and contains no premium over face value.
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
10 cents.
The value is 10 cents
U.S. dimes minted in 1966 contain no silver, and are worth 10 cents.
The coin is still in circulation and very common, spend it.
Ask a new question with a specific date. Australia does not have a "dime" coin.
It's a common coin, still in circulation, has no silver and is just face value.
the value of a dime is ten cents
Because the value of it is worth half the value of a dime.
10 cents unless in a mint set. It is in common circulation and made out of copper-nickel and contains no premium over face value.
If it is a US dime, it isn't silver. Silver stopped being used in dimes after 1964, so any dime dated 1965 or later is struck in copper-nickel and are only worth face value.
Ten cents was the value of the dime in 1940.
A dime has a face value of 10 cents.