10 cents. The plating makes it an altered coin.
It's either a novelty coin or a gold plated dime. If it's only a gold plated dime it's worth around $2.50. If it's a novelty coin it's worthless.
Ten cents. It's not gold, it's been plated for use in jewelry or something similar. There's never been a gold dime.
The gold dime was made in June of 1938 and was discontinued in August of the same year. Only 300 dimes were made.
There are no gold dimes.
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.
No. US Dimes dated 1965 and later, were all made from a copper-clad alloy. The dime you have is gold-plated.
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.
No. It's plated.
Some coins do tone to a gold color or it may have been plated but it's not gold. So just spend it.
It's called a Roosevelt dime rather than a liberty dime, and it's worth 10 cents for the copper-nickel coin underneath and about a penny or 2 for the gold plating. The US never minted gold dimes - they'd be worth A LOT more than 10 cents, after all!
Gold Rush - 1988 VG was released on: USA: 1988