Dimes have never been made of gold. Perhaps your coin was gold plated. There's no specific value for it, so it's only worth as much as someone will pay.
Ten cents - it's not real gold, it's plated. The US never made gold dimes.
The gold plating is done by someone other than the U.S. Mint and adds absolutely no numismatic value. It's only worth as much as someone on eBay is willing to pay, but only being a 1994 dime, that won't be much.
Sorry, no such dime as a "Miscellaneous" dime exists!
2000 euros
The coin is a Sacagawea dollar, it has no gold and is worth $1.00
Because it was plated for use in jewelry or something similar. It has no added value.
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 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.
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.
This did not come from the mint like that. It has to be gold plated. No collector value.
Ten cents - it's not real gold, it's plated. The US never made gold dimes.
The U.S. has never struck a gold dime. A coin that size made of gold would be worth many times more than 10 cents. Your coin is an ordinary silver dime that was plated for use in jewelry or something similar. As such it's only worth its melt value, about $2 as of early 2011.
They have to be dimes from 2000..
Its only 10 cents.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt is on the 2000 U.S. dime.