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1960-D
| Weight | 2.5 g |
| Diameter | 17.9 mm |
| Mint | Denver |
| Strike | Circulation strike |
| Mintage | 200,160,400 |
| Edge | Reeded |
| Alignment | ↑↓ Coin |
| Composition | 90% Silver, 10% Copper |
| Melt value | — |
| Designer | John R. Sinnock |
| Collector's Key ID | CK-2145 |
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No additional varieties recorded for this strike.
External references
The 1960-D Roosevelt dime is the Denver issue from the start of the 1960s silver run, with 200,160,400 circulation strikes produced. Denver's 1960 output crossed the 200 million mark for the first time on a Roosevelt dime, nearly three times Philadelphia's 72,081,602 figure for the year. The imbalance reflected Treasury's continued reliance on Denver press capacity to absorb the volume of retail-demand-driven dime production while Philadelphia carried a smaller share. The 1960-D thus stands as the dominant circulation product of the year, with broad distribution across the country through Federal Reserve channels. The "D" mintmark appears on the reverse to the left of the torch base, in the standard Sinnock-set position established in 1946. The coin carries no design changes, with the FDR portrait on the obverse and the torch flanked by olive and oak branches on the reverse.
The 1960-D follows the silver-era specifications: 2.5 grams, 17.9 millimeters, 90% silver and 10% copper, reeded edge. Authentication on a Denver circulation strike includes weight verification at roughly 2.45 to 2.55 grams, examination of the "D" mintmark for clean punching, and inspection of the reeded edge. Added-mintmark fakery is not a concern on this date because both the Philadelphia and Denver issues trade at common-date prices. Strike quality on 1960-D coins runs from average to sharp, with the Full Bands designation requiring complete separation on both pairs of horizontal bands wrapping the torch. Denver dies produced FB strikes at a steady rate through the year, though softer central-detail examples are common in the population because of the high production volume and routine die wear.
In the market the 1960-D trades at entry-level prices through circulated and lower Mint State grades, with the silver melt floor anchoring the lower end. PCGS and NGC populations are robust through MS-65 and MS-66 but tighten at MS-67 FB and finer. The date is a common roll filler in Roosevelt date sets without a Key or Semi-Key premium, and condition-rarity buyers focus on strict-FB MS-67 examples, which trade well into three-figure territory and reach four figures at MS-67+ FB. For broader context, see the Roosevelt Dime series history.
Reference data only — not an appraisal.
| Grade | Description | Low | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| G-4 | Good (G) | $4.50 | $5 |
| VG-8 | Very Good (VG) | $5 | $5.50 |
| F-12 | Fine (F) | $5.50 | $6 |
| VF-20 | Very Fine (VF) | $6 | $6 |
| EF-40 | Extremely Fine (EF) | $5.50 | $6.50 |
| AU-50 | About Uncirculated (AU) | $6 | $6.50 |
| MS-60 | Uncirculated (MS) | $6.50 | $7 |
| MS-63 | Choice Uncirculated (MS) | — | — |
How much is a 1960-D Roosevelt Dime worth?
How many 1960-D Roosevelt Dimes were minted?
What is a 1960-D Roosevelt Dime made of?
What is the melt value of a 1960-D Roosevelt Dime?
Is the 1960-D Roosevelt Dime a key date?
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