New Zealand introduced decimal currency in 1967 and have never produced a half cent coin.
New Zealand uses the SI system of measurements for trade, and a decimal system of currency.
No general circulation New Zealand decimal coin contains any silver. New Zealand 50 cent coins were made from a copper nickel alloy from 1967 until 2006.
The first New Zealand 1 cent coin was issued in 1967.
No. No New Zealand general circulation decimal coin has ever contained any silver. The last New Zealand general circulation coins to contain any silver at all were last issued in 1946.
New Zealand 20 cent coins have never been minted in gold.
The value of any coin would depend on the year and the condition. Most New Zealand decimal coins, unless they are in mint uncirculated condition, would be worth face value only. NOTE - All New Zealand pre-2006 50 cent coins are no longer legal tender, but they are redeemable for face value at the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
New Zealand withdrew its two cent coins from circulation in 1990; the smallest denomination coin in NZ is now the ten cent coin.
Such a coin does not exist. The New Zealand 10 cent coin was first issued in 1967.
There were 35,043,0000 New Zealand one cent coins minted for issue in 1974.
Such a coin does not exist. The New Zealand 1 cent coin was first issued in 1967.
There is no New Zealand 30 cent coin.