Retail price is $1.50-$2.00 for average coins and Mint state coins are $9.00
A 1959 dime is 90% silver. At today's spot price of about $13.50, it is worth at least 97 cents.
A 1943 Mercury dime unless in exceptionally good condition is only worth silver melt value. At the time of writing it is about $2.15 or so, but it fluctuates depending on silver spot price.
A 1964 dime is not rare enough to be of interest to collectors, so it is worth the value of the silver contained in it. Silver dimes only contain 0.07234 ounce of silver, which was about 80 cents worth of silver at the time this answer was made. If you take it to a dealer at this time, you would have been offered 65-70 cents for it. The price of silver is increasing and is likely greater now. See the related link below for the current value of a 1964 dime.
Most likely, the hole was created by someone, and if you think it was an accident at the mint, then stop reading here. if i were you, i would sell that half dime for the price of silver used
The 1941 Mercury dime is very common, most are valued at $2.00 just for the silver.
With silver at $41.39 per ounce, as of 9-10-11 a 90% silver dime has a Melt Value of $3.99.
A bit less than $2 with current silver prices. The price of it depends on the spot price of silver and thus changes daily or even hourly.
A 1959 dime is 90% silver. At today's spot price of about $13.50, it is worth at least 97 cents.
A 1943 Mercury dime unless in exceptionally good condition is only worth silver melt value. At the time of writing it is about $2.15 or so, but it fluctuates depending on silver spot price.
Yes. The 1962 Roosevelt dime is 90% silver.
There is 2.25 grams of silver in a 1960 dime.
There is no silver in a 1990 US dime.
There are 2.25 grams of silver in a 1935 silver dime. It is made of 90% silver and 10% copper.
Yes - the "Mercury" dime from 1916 to 1945 has 90% silver in it
The value is dependent on silver price, at the time of writing it is just over $2.10 but the value changes whenever silver changes.
So many were made the value is for just the silver, about $2.00.
The U.S. never made 100% silver coins for circulation. The metal would be too soft for daily use. All silver coins had at least 10% copper in them. Dimes dated 1964 and earlier contain about 0.07 ounces of silver. The price of silver changes so you'd need to search on terms such as SPOT PRICE SILVER to get the most current value, then multiply the price per ounce by 0.07. For example, at $14/oz a 1964 dime contains about $1 worth of silver.