2024 Canadian 10-Cent (Dime) Value Guide
Find out what your 2024 Canadian dime is worth. Complete price guide by grade and finish (Business Strike, Brilliant Uncirculated, Specimen, Silver Proof), the emerging 'Halo' die-clash variety, and current CAD market values as of February 2026.
Most 2024 Canadian dimes found in pocket change are worth exactly $0.10 (face value). Certified Gem-grade examples and coins from limited collector sets range from $5.00โ$250+ depending on finish and grade.
- Circulated (GโAU):$0.10 โ face value only
- Business Strike Gem (MS65):$5.00โ$8.00
- Classic Uncirculated Set BU (MS65):$10.00โ$15.00
- First Strike BU (MS65):$12.00โ$18.00
- Specimen (SP, Gem):$8.00โ$12.00
- Silver Proof (RCAF Centennial Set):$20.00โ$30.00
- Top-Grade First Strike (MS69):$100โ$250+
Found in change? Face value. The 73,975,000 circulation mintage makes the coin plentiful โ Gem-grade survivors are condition rarities, not mintage rarities. Mirror-like fields with frosted white devices? That is a Silver Proof from a collector set, worth $20+ โ it is also non-magnetic and heavier (2.45g) than a steel dime. Steel or silver? The magnet test resolves this in one second: the 2024 steel dime clings firmly; the silver proof does not respond. See full value chart โ
All values in Canadian Dollars (CAD) as of February 2026. Value is determined primarily by grade, finish (Business Strike vs. BU vs. Specimen vs. Silver Proof), and third-party certification status.
The 2024 Canadian 10-cent piece represents the first full production year of King Charles III's effigy as the standard obverse design across all Canadian denominations. Steven Rosati's portrait of the King โ facing left, per centuries-old numismatic tradition โ pairs with Emanuel Hahn's enduring Bluenose schooner reverse, which has graced the dime continuously since 1937. Struck in Multi-Ply Plated Steel for circulation (73,975,000 coins) and in 99.99% fine silver for several collector sets, the 2024 dime exists in multiple distinct finishes that vary dramatically in value. For a complete cross-year reference, see our Canadian Dime Value Guide.
Note: Mint errors such as off-center strikes, clips, and wrong-planchet pieces exist for 2024 dimes but are outside the scope of this standard value guide. The die-clash "Halo" variety discussed in the Variants section has been classified by the source document as an emerging catalogued variety rather than a conventional production error.
2024 Canadian Dime Composition & Melt Value
Side-by-side comparison of the 2024 steel circulation dime (left, 1.75g, strongly magnetic) and the 2024 pure silver proof dime (right, 2.45g, non-magnetic), illustrating the compositional and visual differences between the two versions. (Illustration โ not a photo of your exact coin)
Circulation Issue: Multi-Ply Plated Steel (MPPS)
The standard 2024 dime is produced using Multi-Ply Plated Steel (MPPS) technology, standardized for the Canadian 10-cent denomination in 2001. The manufacturing process begins with a low-carbon steel core โ approximately 92% of the coin's total mass โ which is then electroplated with alternating layers of copper and nickel. The outermost nickel layer provides the coin's characteristic silvery-white appearance and corrosion resistance. A copper layer sits between the steel core and the outer nickel, functioning as a bonding agent and contributing to the specific electromagnetic profile required by modern vending machines and automated coin counters.
- Steel core: ~92%
- Copper layer: ~5.5%
- Nickel outermost layer: ~2.5%
Melt Value: Negligible
The 2024 steel dime contains no silver and no gold. The raw material value of 1.75 grams of steel, copper, and nickel is a fraction of one cent โ far below the coin's 10-cent face value. There is no economic incentive to melt these coins. The Currency Act of Canada also prohibits the melting of coin of the realm regardless of metal value.
Magnet Test โ Primary Composition Diagnostic
Because the 2024 dime has a steel core, it is strongly magnetic. A standard magnet applied to the coin surface provides instant composition confirmation:
- Clings firmly to the magnet: Steel coin (standard circulation, BU collector set, or Specimen). Proceed to the Finish Identification section.
- Does not respond to the magnet: Likely silver. Weigh the coin โ 2.45g confirms the Silver Proof collector issue. A non-magnetic coin weighing 1.75g would be highly anomalous and warrants professional examination.
Silver Proof Issue: 99.99% Pure Silver
A compositionally distinct 2024 10-cent coin appears inside several Royal Canadian Mint collector sets. This version is struck in 99.99% pure silver and carries entirely different physical properties from the steel circulation coin.
The silver proof dime contains approximately 0.079 troy oz of pure silver. At a reference spot price of approximately $35 CAD/oz (as cited in the source document), the melt value of this collector variant is roughly $2.75 CAD โ tangibly above face value, though far below the numismatic cost of the set it originates from.
โน๏ธ How to Distinguish Steel from Silver at a Glance
Visual appearance alone is not reliable โ both the steel and silver versions share the same design and similar diameters. Use the two-step test: (1) Magnet test โ steel dimes cling firmly; silver proof dimes do not respond at all. (2) Weight test โ steel dimes weigh 1.75g; silver proof dimes weigh 2.45g. A basic digital scale resolves all ambiguity in seconds.
2024 Canadian Dime Value Chart by Grade & Finish
Grade comparison for the 2024 Canadian dime: a typical circulated example (left), a Choice Uncirculated MS63 (centre), and a Gem Uncirculated MS65 (right), showing the dramatic surface-quality difference that drives the value cliff for modern steel coins. (Illustration โ not a photo of your exact coin)
2024 Canadian Dime โ Business Strike (Circulation)
With 73,975,000 coins struck for commerce, the standard 2024 dime is abundant in all circulated grades. Value in this finish is driven almost entirely by condition preservation โ the coin itself is not scarce, but pristine examples are.
| Type | Circulated (GโAU) | MS60โ62 | MS63โ64 | MS65 (Gem) | Mintage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Circulation โ Bluenose / King Charles III | $0.10 (face) | $0.10โ$0.25 | $0.50โ$1.00 | $5.00โ$8.00 | 73,975,000 |
Trophy-level note: A certified MS69 First Strike example is estimated at $100โ$250+ โ see the Notable Variants section. Steel plating is soft; MS66 and higher examples represent a tiny fraction of all coins struck and command significant premiums in registry-set competition.
โน๏ธ Understanding the Value Cliff
From MS60 to MS64, dealer premiums are modest because these grades are easily sourced from bank rolls. The cliff begins at MS65 (Gem): steel-plated dimes suffer contact marks the moment they leave the dies and fall into collection bins. A mark-free MS65 example is a statistical survivor, not a mintage rarity. MS66 and MS67 certified examples command substantial registry-set premiums not captured in standard per-grade pricing tables.
2024 Canadian Dime โ Brilliant Uncirculated (Collector Sets & Rolls)
Two distinct BU products offer surface quality superior to standard circulation coins. The 2024 Classic Uncirculated Coin Set contains a BU dime in standard Royal Canadian Mint packaging. The Special Wrap Roll Collection (First Strikes) contains coins struck on the first day of production, sealed in rolls with holographic labels.
| Product Source | MS60โ62 | MS63โ64 | MS65 (Gem) | Mintage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classic Uncirculated Coin Set | $1.00โ$2.00 | $3.00โ$5.00 | $10.00โ$15.00 | 100,000 sets |
| First Strike โ Special Wrap Roll | $2.00โ$3.00 | $4.00โ$6.00 | $12.00โ$18.00 | 5,000 rolls (250,000 coins) |
The "First Strike" designation is applied by PCGS and NGC to coins received within the first 30 days of a coin's official release date. The holographic seal on an intact Special Wrap Roll is the strongest proof of provenance; once the roll is broken, individual coins require third-party grading submission to receive the certified First Strike label.
2024 Canadian Dime โ Specimen
The Specimen-finish dime appears exclusively in the 2024 Royal Canadian Mint Specimen Set (Northern Leopard Frog theme), limited to 30,000 sets. It is distinguished by fine parallel lines (striations) in the background fields โ the definitive visual diagnostic for this finish โ combined with frosted, matte devices and sharply squared rims.
| Finish | SP63โ64 | SP65 (Gem) | Mintage | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Specimen โ Northern Leopard Frog Set | $3.00โ$5.00 | $8.00โ$12.00 | 30,000 sets | Steel composition; non-precious metal. Values shown for coins removed from original set packaging. |
2024 Canadian Dime โ Silver Proof Issues
Three distinct precious-metal collector versions of the 2024 dime exist. All are struck in 99.99% pure silver and are compositionally, physically, and financially separate from any steel coin. Verify composition with the magnet test before consulting these values.
| Issue | Finish | Typical Value (Coin Only) | Mintage | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCAF Centennial Fine Silver Proof Set | Proof (Mirror Fields + DCAM) | $20.00โ$30.00 | 25,000 sets | Standard pure silver proof; frosted devices, deep mirror fields. |
| Special Edition Silver Dollar Proof Set | Proof (Rose Gold Plated variant) | $25.00โ$35.00 | 20,000 sets | Verify whether the specific dime in this set carries rose gold plating or is the standard proof coin in higher-tier packaging before valuing. |
| Tribute: W Mint Mark โ Bluenose 1 oz Silver | Specimen/Proof | $185.00โ$200.00 | 7,500 coins | โ ๏ธ NOT a standard 10-cent coin โ see callout below. |
โ ๏ธ The Tribute "W" Coin Is NOT a Standard Dime
The 2024 Tribute: W Mint Mark โ Bluenose coin is a large-format 38mm, 1 oz (31.1g) pure silver collector issue. It bears a "W" (Winnipeg) mint mark and carries a legal face value of 10 cents, but its 38mm diameter โ more than double the 18.03mm of a circulation dime โ its 1 oz silver content, and its $185โ$200 market price immediately distinguish it from any standard dime. Do not confuse search results for this piece with standard dime valuations. Spending it at a store for $0.10 would be a significant financial loss.
Trophy-level note: A certified PR70 Deep Cameo silver proof is estimated at $100โ$150 โ see the Notable Variants section. All values in CAD as of February 2026. For a complete cross-year denomination reference, see our Canadian Dime Value Guide.
Most Valuable 2024 Canadian Dime Varieties
The 2024 "Halo" (Ghost Ship) die-clash variety: a faint silhouette of King Charles III's profile โ forehead, nose, and chin arc โ is superimposed on the Bluenose schooner's mainsail. Use a 5โ10x loupe focused on the mainsail and look for a curved line that does not belong to the rigging. (Illustration โ not a photo of your exact coin)
A. Trophy-Level: Top Condition Rarities
For modern high-mintage coins struck in steel, trophy value derives from condition rarity โ not from a small original mintage. Steel plating is soft, and coins scratch each other during the minting process before they ever leave the facility. The following represent the statistical ceiling of what survives in certified top grades:
| Coin | Why It Commands a Premium | Requirement | Estimated Top Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 10ยข First Strike | Condition rarity: fresher dies, holographic roll provenance, limited to 5,000 rolls | PCGS/NGC MS69 | $100โ$250+ |
| 2024 10ยข Silver Proof | Perfect striking on a pure silver planchet; DCAM contrast | PCGS/NGC PR70 DCAM | $100โ$150 |
| 2024 Tribute 1 oz Silver | Low mintage (7,500 coins) + 1 oz silver content + large-format collector format | Original packaging or PF70 | $200โ$300 |
โน๏ธ "First Strike" Label: What It Means
PCGS and NGC apply the "First Strike" designation to coins received within the first 30 days of a coin's official release. For the 2024 Special Wrap Roll Collection, the holographic seal on an intact roll confirms provenance. Once a roll is broken, individual coins must be submitted to a grading service โ with proof of roll origin if possible โ to receive the certified First Strike label in a slab.
B. Findable Variety: The "Halo" / "Ghost Ship" Die-Clash
A 2024 Royal Canadian Mint Special Wrap Roll for the 10-cent denomination, sealed with the holographic label that certifies First Strike status. Preserving the original sealed roll intact is the strongest proof of provenance for the First Strike premium. (Illustration โ not a photo of your exact coin)
The most significant "findable" variety for the 2024 10-cent piece is the "Halo" (also documented as the "Ghost Ship") die-clash impression. The source document for this guide classifies it in the non-error variants section and notes it is actively discussed in Canadian collector forums, with anticipated future attribution in the Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins.
How a Die Clash Creates the Halo
A die clash occurs when the minting press completes a cycle without a coin blank (planchet) between the dies. The King's portrait on the obverse die and the Bluenose design on the reverse die collide with significant force. This impact transfers a faint mirror impression of the King's profile โ specifically the forehead, nose, and chin โ into the field area of the reverse die. Coins subsequently struck with that die carry a ghostly outline of the King superimposed over the sails of the schooner.
How to Identify It (Step-by-Step)
- Use a 5x or 10x magnifying loupe.
- Examine the large mainsail on the reverse of the coin under good direct light.
- Look for a faint curved line that does not belong to the rigging geometry or the sail outline โ specifically a smooth arc matching the profile of a face (forehead curving down to nose, then to chin).
- Confirmed: Place the coin immediately in a protective 2ร2 flip or coin capsule without further handling and consult an ICCS-accredited specialist for attribution.
| Variety | Classification | Where Found | Estimated Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Halo" / "Ghost Ship" Die-Clash | Emerging catalogued variety (die clash mechanism) | Circulation rolls; any standard 2024 dime source | $5โ$20 estimated โ market actively developing as of Feb 2026 |
| First Strike โ Special Wrap Roll | Catalogue-listed provenance variety | Holographic-sealed Special Wrap Rolls only | $2โ$5 per coin if removed from sealed roll |
| Specimen Finish | Catalogue-listed finish variety | Northern Leopard Frog Specimen Set only | $5โ$10 raw, removed from set packaging |
โ ๏ธ Never Clean Your Coins
Cleaning strips the original plating lustre and leaves hairlines visible under magnification. All major grading services (ICCS, PCGS, NGC) assign a "Details โ Cleaned" designation to any cleaned coin. This removes all numismatic premium regardless of the coin's underlying grade, variety status, or condition. A Halo variety coin that has been cleaned cannot be certified as such and is worth only face value.
Note: Major mint errors such as off-center strikes, clips, and wrong-planchet pieces exist for 2024 dimes but are outside the scope of this standard value guide.
2024 Canadian Dime Identification Guide
2024 Canadian 10-cent coin: obverse (left) showing King Charles III facing left with designer initials SR near the bust truncation; reverse (right) showing the Bluenose schooner with Emanuel Hahn's initial H, the denomination 10 CENTS, and the date 2024.
30-Second Identification Checklist
Work through this systematic triage to determine exactly what you have before consulting the value tables.
Year Check: Confirm the coin is dated 2024. The 2023 issue also bears the King Charles III portrait and is a distinct coin โ do not interchange values between the two years.
Monarch Check: The obverse must show King Charles III, facing left โ the traditional direction opposite to his predecessor Queen Elizabeth II, who faced right. This is the Fifth Portrait of the Canadian coin series, designed by Canadian artist Steven Rosati. His initials SR appear near the truncation of the bust. The legend reads CHARLES III and CANADA.
Reverse Check: The reverse shows the Bluenose schooner under full sail, designed by Emanuel Hahn (initial H visible on the design). The denomination 10 CENTS and date 2024 appear on the reverse. This design has been used since 1937.
Edge Check: The 2024 dime has a reeded edge (fine parallel grooves running around the perimeter). A plain-edged coin of this size and design would be anomalous.
Magnet Test โ Composition Verification: Apply a magnet to the coin surface.
- Strong attraction: Steel coin (Multi-Ply Plated Steel core). The coin is either a standard circulation strike, a BU coin from a collector set, or a Specimen. Proceed to Step 7.
- No attraction: The coin is likely silver. Weigh it โ 2.45g confirms the Silver Proof collector issue (18.05mm diameter). A non-magnetic, 1.75g coin would be highly anomalous and warrants professional examination.
Marks Check: The standard 2024 circulation and BU dimes carry no mint mark โ this is standard practice for Canadian circulation coinage regardless of which facility (Winnipeg or Ottawa) struck the coin. The "W" (Winnipeg) mint mark appears exclusively on the large-format 1 oz silver Tribute coin, which is a collector piece, not a circulation dime. No other special marks are documented for the 2024 circulation or BU issues.
Finish Identification โ THE CRITICAL STEP:
Visual finish comparison for the 2024 Canadian dime. From left: Business Strike (cartwheel lustre, uniform fields, contact marks possible); Brilliant Uncirculated (blazing uninterrupted lustre, creamy appearance); Specimen (fine parallel striations in background fields โ the definitive diagnostic, frosted devices); Silver Proof (deep mirror fields โ your reflection is visible, heavily frosted white Deep Cameo devices). (Illustration โ not a photo of your exact coin)
| Finish | Fields (Background) | Devices (King + Ship) | Origin | Value Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Business Strike | Cartwheel lustre; rotating spoke of reflected light; contact marks common | Similar reflectivity to fields | Pocket change, bank rolls | $0.10 circulated |
| Brilliant Uncirculated (BU) | Blazing, uninterrupted lustre; creamy or satiny in character | Sharp relief, very few contact marks | Classic Uncirculated Sets; First Strike rolls | $1.00โ$18.00 |
| Specimen (SP) | Fine parallel striations (lined background) โ the definitive Specimen diagnostic | Frosted, matte, sharply squared rim | Northern Leopard Frog Specimen Set only | $3.00โ$12.00 |
| Silver Proof (PR/PF) | Deep mirror polish โ reflective enough to see your face clearly | Heavily frosted white; Deep Cameo (DCAM) contrast | RCAF Centennial & Special Edition Silver Proof Sets | $20.00โ$30.00+ |
โน๏ธ The Lined-Background Test for Specimen Coins
The definitive Specimen diagnostic: tilt the coin under a single point light source (a lamp, not diffuse daylight). If the flat background fields show fine parallel striations running in one consistent direction, you have a Specimen coin. Business strikes show rotating cartwheel lustre (the spoke of brightness rotates as you tilt); proofs show a clear mirror reflection with no striations whatsoever. Getting this identification right can mean the difference between $0.10 and $12.00.
Magnet test for the 2024 Canadian dime: a neodymium magnet clings firmly to the steel-core circulation dime (left, 1.75g) while the pure silver proof dime (right, 2.45g) is completely non-magnetic. This is the fastest and most reliable authentication diagnostic for 2024 dime composition.
Halo Variety Check: If the coin is from a circulation or roll source, use a 5โ10x loupe focused on the large mainsail on the reverse. Look for a faint curved line that does not match any element of the rigging โ specifically the arc of a face profile (forehead curving to nose and chin). See the Notable Variants section for full diagnostic instructions.
Grading Services: ICCS vs. PCGS vs. NGC
ICCS (International Coin Certification Service), based in Toronto, is the Canadian standard grading authority and is highly respected for attributing Canadian varieties such as the Halo die-clash. PCGS and NGC are US-based services that use hard plastic slabs and a more granular top-end scale (MS69, MS70, PR70) that frequently commands higher premiums in the modern registry-set market due to the prestige of the "perfect" grade. Grading fees typically make submission economically worthwhile only for coins that are expected to grade MS65 or higher, or coins originating from collector products.
2024 Canadian Dime Value FAQs
What is a 2024 Canadian dime worth?
A 2024 Canadian dime from circulation is worth exactly $0.10 (face value) in any circulated grade. The 73,975,000 circulation mintage ensures these coins are common. Numismatic value begins at the Gem Uncirculated level: certified MS65 circulation examples are valued at $5.00โ$8.00. Coins from collector products trade higher โ see the full value chart above for each finish and grade tier. All values are in Canadian Dollars (CAD) as of February 2026.
Is a 2024 Canadian dime silver?
The standard 2024 circulation dime is not silver. It is Multi-Ply Plated Steel โ approximately 92% steel with copper and nickel plating โ and contains no precious metal. The magnet test resolves the question instantly: a steel dime clings firmly to a magnet; a silver coin does not respond. A 99.99% pure silver version of the 2024 dime does exist, but it is found exclusively inside limited collector sets (the RCAF Centennial Fine Silver Proof Set and the Special Edition Silver Dollar Proof Set). Silver proof dimes also weigh 2.45g compared to 1.75g for the steel coin โ a digital scale confirms the difference in seconds.
What makes a 2024 Canadian dime valuable?
Three factors drive numismatic value above face: (1) Grade โ steel coins scratch during production, so MS65+ survivors are statistically rare despite the high mintage; the value cliff between MS64 and MS65 is significant. (2) Finish and provenance โ coins from the Specimen set, Classic Uncirculated Set, or First Strike rolls command meaningful premiums over loose circulation examples at equivalent grades. (3) Variety โ the emerging "Halo" die-clash variety, if authenticated by a grading service, adds a collector premium on top of the base grade value. Certification by ICCS, PCGS, or NGC is essential for realizing full market value at MS65 and above.
Is the 2024 Canadian dime magnetic?
Yes โ strongly magnetic. The steel core accounts for approximately 92% of the coin's mass, causing it to cling firmly to any magnet. This is the primary authentication diagnostic for composition. Older Canadian dimes struck in silver (pre-1968) and pure nickel (1968โ1999) are non-magnetic or only weakly magnetic respectively; the 2024 steel dime is strongly magnetic. If your 2024 dime does not respond to a magnet, it is either the Silver Proof collector issue (weigh it โ 2.45g confirms silver) or warrants professional examination.
What is the difference between the Specimen and Proof finishes on 2024 dimes?
Both are intentional collector finishes produced by the Royal Canadian Mint, but they are visually distinct and compositionally different for the 2024 issue. The Specimen (SP) is a steel coin from the Northern Leopard Frog set: its background fields display fine parallel striations (a lined/matte appearance), and the devices are frosted with sharp squared rims. The Proof (PR/PF) is a 99.99% pure silver coin from the RCAF Centennial and Special Edition sets: its fields are deeply polished mirrors โ you can see a clear reflection in them โ and the devices are heavily frosted white, creating a dramatic Deep Cameo contrast. The Specimen is strongly magnetic and weighs 1.75g; the Proof is non-magnetic and weighs 2.45g.
What is the "Halo" or "Ghost Ship" variety, and how do I find it?
The Halo is a die-clash variety caused when the minting press cycles without a coin blank between the dies, causing the King's portrait die and the Bluenose reverse die to collide. This transfers a faint impression of King Charles III's profile โ forehead, nose, and chin โ into the reverse die field. Subsequent coins show a ghostly silhouette of the King superimposed on the schooner's mainsail. To check your coin: examine the large mainsail under a 5โ10x magnifying loupe under direct light, and look for a smooth curved line that does not belong to the rigging geometry. The variety is actively tracked by Canadian variety collectors and is anticipated for future Charlton Standard Catalogue attribution. Estimated current premium is $5โ$20 as the market develops. Immediately place any suspected Halo coin in a protective holder and consult an ICCS-accredited specialist.
Should I get my 2024 Canadian dime professionally graded?
Grading is economically worthwhile only if your coin is likely to grade MS65 or higher, or if it originates from a collector product (First Strike roll, Specimen set, or silver proof set). Grading fees at ICCS, PCGS, and NGC โ plus shipping and insurance โ typically range from $25 to $50+ per coin, which exceeds the market value of a MS63 circulation dime. ICCS is the Canadian standard and is particularly well-regarded for variety attribution, including the Halo die-clash. PCGS and NGC's granular top-end scale (MS69, MS70, PR70) often commands premiums in the modern registry-set market. As of February 2026, the grading population for 2024 dimes is still developing, and values for top-grade examples remain somewhat volatile.
What is the Tribute "W" coin, and is it safe to spend?
The 2024 Tribute: W Mint Mark โ Bluenose is a large-format 38mm, 1 oz (31.1g) pure silver collector coin. It bears a legal face value of 10 cents, making it technically legal tender under Canadian law. However, its silver content and collector value of $185โ$200 make spending it at face value an extreme financial loss. The "W" Winnipeg mint mark on this piece is a collector tribute feature and not present on any standard circulation dime. If you encounter this coin, store it safely โ do not spend it.
Methodology & Sources
Values in this guide reflect market data aggregated as of February 2026 from the following primary sources:
- Royal Canadian Mint (mint.ca โ 10 Cents) โ Confirmed 2024 circulation mintage (73,975,000), technical specifications, and individual collector product mintage figures via the 2024 Annual Report.
- Coins and Canada (coinsandcanada.com) โ Canadian price trends, variety listings, and retail market data.
- Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins (Vols. 1, 77th/78th Editions) โ Base variety listings, grading standards, and historical context.
- PCGS / NGC Population Reports โ Grade rarity analysis and census context for modern certified issues.
- Geoffrey Bell Auctions and Heritage Auctions โ Market realization context for high-grade modern Canadian coin issues.
- Numista โ King Charles III 10 Cents (Canada) โ Crowdsourced specifications and frequency data.
- Colonial Acres Coins โ Retail reference pricing for the 2024 Silver Proof dime.
Disclaimer: Values represent typical market prices at the time of research and are subject to change as certified populations grow, silver spot prices fluctuate, and variety attributions are formally catalogued. The Halo die-clash variety is an emerging market; the premium cited is an estimate only. This guide covers standard and collector issues exclusively โ mint errors are out of scope.
A note on images: To help illustrate coin diagnostics and rare varieties โ especially complex errors that are difficult to describe in text alone โ this guide uses AI-generated images. All written values, diagnostics, and variety attributions have been manually reviewed against the cited sources above. While our editorial team works to ensure every image is accurate and helpful, AI-generated illustrations may occasionally misrepresent fine details. If you spot any discrepancy between an image and its written description, please contact us or leave a comment below โ we review all feedback and correct errors promptly. Numismatic knowledge is a community effort, and your input helps us build a more accurate resource for everyone.
