Simple answer is no. 1964 was the last year of 90% silver dimes.
All 1965 U.S. dimes are Roosevelt dimes, so that's what it would look like. A very few 1965 US dimes were struck by mistake on 90% silver planchets that were used for 1964 silver dimes.
Quarters and dimes used to have silver in them, although they do not nowadays. The years that quarters had silver in them were any years before 1965.
All pre-1965 US quarters and dimes are 90% silver.
Starting in 1965, U.S. dimes were no longer made of silver.
U.S. dimes dated 1964 and earlier contain 90% silver with 10% copper. Dimes dated 1965 and after contain absolutely no silver.
Modern dimes are not "silver-coated". They are made of a copper core with outer cladding of cupronickel. No silver at all. Another Answer: Prior to 1965 dimes were 90% silver.
Liberty does not describe a dime. However, when most people refer to "liberty dimes" they are talking about dimes made before the 1940s. The best way to know how much silver is in your dime is to check the date. All dimes made before 1965 contain 90% silver. All dimes dated 1965 or later contain 0% silver.
No. The last year for silver dimes in the U.S. was 1964.
No. The last year for silver dimes and quarters was 1964.
US dimes minted before 1965 are currently worth at least $2 for their silver content.
All circulation-strike 1965 dimes were made with the familiar copper-nickel "sandwich" that's still used today.A very small number of 1965 dimes were accidentally struck on silver blanks left over from 1964, but these are extremelyunlikely to turn up in change.
US dimes from 1965 to date are copper-nickel not silver. The coin is face value.