Dimes, quarters, half dollars, and dollars were all made of silver through 1967 and are worth significantly more than face value. All the old large cents have at least some collector value. Two key coins are the 1921 5 and 50 cents.
It is worth nothing since it does notexist. Canadian dimes where not minted between the years of 1876-1879. However if you have any other inquires of the price of your coins asuggestthe following site for Canadian coins:http://www.coinsandcanada.com/coins-prices.php
its gotta be worth something .....what would you pay... thats how you value it.. is it worth something to you put a price on it and see if there is any interest in it thats what I would do, to figure out what its worth.
No. Canadian 5¢ coins haven't contained any silver since 1921.
Any local bank should do it for you, but you will "lose" some money in the process - the Canadian dollar is not worth as much as the American dollar.
Canada issues six denominations of coins, so your question isn't specific enough. In any case, most Canadian coins struck since 1969 are only worth face value unless they are in uncirculated or proof condition and are in their original packaging.
Yes, a penny is worth 1/100 of a dollar, a nickel is worth 1/20 of a dollar, a dime is worth 1/10 of a dollar, and a quarter is worth 1/4 of a dollar!
bucks, coins, dollars, any money resource
The half's, quarters and dimes are 90% silver so they do have value. The nickel and cent would have to be high grade Mint State coins to be worth a dime.
25 Canadian Cents. It isn't made out of any precious metals and is only worth face value. It is worth around 24.7 US Cents.
Bear in mind that the exchange rate between US and Canadian currency (or between any two currencies) fluctuates on a daily basis. At the present time (January 2010) the Canadian dollar is worth a few cents less than the US dollar. The value is very close.
Any coins that new will still be in circulation and will be worth face value only.
There was an error in the 2000-P Sacagawea Dollars. It was boldly doubled tail feathers. Only about 5,500 of the 767,140,000 are believed to be errors.