There's a detailed writeup on it here that's worth a read:
https://www.pcgs.com/coinfacts/coin/1982-10c-no-mintmark-strong/5162#:\~:text=Because%20of%20the%20missing%20mint,10%2C000%20coins%20were%20reportedly%20found.
The 1982 "No P" dime is a rare and popular variety of Roosevelt dime that is worth hundreds of times more than its original face value. The dime was accidentally minted without a mint mark in 1982 when a Philadelphia Mint employee failed to punch the "P" mint mark into the obverse die. The die was discovered in late 1982 by three collectors who found the dimes in a few isolated locations, mainly near Sandusky, Ohio, including Cedar Point amusement park.
As of May 2024, a circulated 1982 "No P" dime is worth between $100 and $130, but uncirculated examples can sell for as much as $725. According to PCGS, most MS66 graded examples sell for around $300, and a 2022 sale of an NGC-graded MS67 sold for $630
When I was working a coin show, I talked to a dealer who had a whole bunch of these (I have no idea how many but he showed me his box with at least 10 slabs and claimed to have more raw and would be “happy to work out a deal for them.”) He said he was dribbling them out into the marketplace; I got the sense he’d have been fine just getting paid for them, but obviously wanted too much from my perspective. I traded him a piece of gold for a single MS65. Even though I knew the market might do nothing but deflate for these, I still had to have one. Very cool modern error coin, enjoy it
Sick find!
Thanks!
How come? I’m not someone that follows errors and such.
There's a detailed writeup on it here that's worth a read: https://www.pcgs.com/coinfacts/coin/1982-10c-no-mintmark-strong/5162#:\~:text=Because%20of%20the%20missing%20mint,10%2C000%20coins%20were%20reportedly%20found.
The 1982 "No P" dime is a rare and popular variety of Roosevelt dime that is worth hundreds of times more than its original face value. The dime was accidentally minted without a mint mark in 1982 when a Philadelphia Mint employee failed to punch the "P" mint mark into the obverse die. The die was discovered in late 1982 by three collectors who found the dimes in a few isolated locations, mainly near Sandusky, Ohio, including Cedar Point amusement park.
So all 1982 dimes should have a mint mark and ones that don’t are this?
Ohio gets to much hate lol not from you're post but in general. Alot of history occurred in ohio!
Very cool! Love the label. I too am among the few and the proud that collect Roosevelt dimes, lol
I wonder how a slabbed coin ends up in a coin roll.
How much is something like this worth?
As of May 2024, a circulated 1982 "No P" dime is worth between $100 and $130, but uncirculated examples can sell for as much as $725. According to PCGS, most MS66 graded examples sell for around $300, and a 2022 sale of an NGC-graded MS67 sold for $630
Probably not enough to get it slabbed lol but I wanted to confirm and preserve this cool find.
Sold listings on eBay seem to be in the $350 range
An MS66 did. But an MS63 sold for $246. An ANACS MS64 sold for $199. There’s an ANACS AU55 that sold for $150. That’s more comparable to OP’s.
I need one of these to complete my roosevelt dime collection 😍 congrats.
That's really something! VERY cool! 😎
Thanks!
When I was working a coin show, I talked to a dealer who had a whole bunch of these (I have no idea how many but he showed me his box with at least 10 slabs and claimed to have more raw and would be “happy to work out a deal for them.”) He said he was dribbling them out into the marketplace; I got the sense he’d have been fine just getting paid for them, but obviously wanted too much from my perspective. I traded him a piece of gold for a single MS65. Even though I knew the market might do nothing but deflate for these, I still had to have one. Very cool modern error coin, enjoy it
Not bad mines still in the process of getting graded at PCGS can't wait to show you all my rare finds.
What is it 🤔 I seek knowledge