There are 7 coins: a penny ($0.01) ,a nickel ($0.05), a dime ($0.10), a quarter ($0.25), a half-dollar ($0.50), a loonie ($1) and a toonie ($2)
There is no company that mints Canadian coins. The coins are minted by the Canadian government, not a company. The government entity in charge of minting Canadian coins is the Canadian Mint.
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Canadian coins don't expire.
The Royal Canadian Mint, a federal Crown corporation established in 1908, is responsible for producing Canadian coins.
Nickel has been used in different denominations of Canadian coins at many different times. A full list of specific dates would be quite complicated, but as a general rule:5¢ coins were struck in nickel from 1922 to 1999, with exceptions for wartime issues and some other part-year composition changes.10¢ to 50¢ coins were struck in nickel from mid-1968 to 1999$1 coins were struck in brass-plated nickel from 1987 to 2012$2 coins used nickel in their outer ring from 1996 to 2011Since those dates, Canadian coins have changed to a special steel composition and nickel is only used as plating.
There are 25 $1.00 Canadian Loonie Coins in a roll.
P. N. Breton has written: 'List of corrected approximate values of Canadian coins and tokens' -- subject(s): Canadian Coins, Coins, Coins, Canadian, Medals, Prices
Most airports will not exchange coins other than coins in their own currency, so if you want 100 Australian dollars in Pearson (Canada) they will usually give you the Canadian amount (with Canadian Coins), if you want 100 Canadian dollars changed, they will give you the balance in Canadian coins. Donate the Australian coins to charity.
There are 25 $1.00 Canadian Loonie Coins in a roll.
Lyman Haynes Low has written: 'Premium list' -- subject(s): American Coins, Canadian Coins, Coins, American, Coins, Canadian
Nearly all Canadian coins are struck at the Royal Canadian Mint (hint ... Google topic!) In the past, when capacity was exceeded the RCM has contracted extra production from the British and U.S. Mints. That's produced some interesting varieties. For example, in the 1960s the U.S. Mint made Canadian dimes. The 2 countries use different reeding on their coins' edges, so for a while there were dimes with Canadian designs but U.S. edges!