Face value: 10 cents.
The 1965 dime is a Roosevelt dime. This dime does not carry a mint mark and there were 1,652, 140,000 of them minted in the U.S. They have a value of between 10 cents and 2 dollars.
A Mercury Head dime date 1926 with no mintmark has a retail value of $2.50 to $6.00 for a coin in average circulated condition.
Your coin is worth face value only; hundreds of millions were minted. Note that the coin is simply a 1965 dime, not 1965-P. The P mint mark wasn't used on US dimes until 1980, and no US coins of any denomination had mint marks from 1965 to 1967.
Assuming no mint mark this coin has a retail value of $4.00 to $6.50 in collectible circulated condition with a bullion value of about $4.00.
If you found it in change, 10 cents. An uncirculated one can retail for up to a dollar or so.
The 1965 dime is a Roosevelt dime. This dime does not carry a mint mark and there were 1,652, 140,000 of them minted in the U.S. They have a value of between 10 cents and 2 dollars.
A Mercury Head dime date 1926 with no mintmark has a retail value of $2.50 to $6.00 for a coin in average circulated condition.
Your coin is worth face value only; hundreds of millions were minted. Note that the coin is simply a 1965 dime, not 1965-P. The P mint mark wasn't used on US dimes until 1980, and no US coins of any denomination had mint marks from 1965 to 1967.
Assuming no mint mark this coin has a retail value of $4.00 to $6.50 in collectible circulated condition with a bullion value of about $4.00.
If you found it in change, 10 cents. An uncirculated one can retail for up to a dollar or so.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no "S" mintmark, the 1915 Barber dime is a common date, retail values are $4.00-$8.00 for most coins.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, retail values run from $2.30 to $2.60. The Philadelphia issue 1946 Roosevelt dime is very common.
For a MS-65 (Gem-BU) retail list at about $100.00.
Current average retail value is $28.00. Issue price was $2.10.
what is the value for an American 1909 silver dime
The value of a US dime marked "ten centavos" is zero, since it is a fake. A real US dime is marked "one dime," not "ten centavos."
All circulating dimes dated 1965 and later are made of copper-nickel, not silver.