1967 was an interesting year in Canadian coins. Halfway through production, they switched both the dime and the quarter from .800 fine silver to .500 fine (80% pure to 50% pure), and you can’t tell the difference. 1967 dime (.800 fine) 0.060 troy oz of silver content. 1967 dime (.500 fine) 0.0375 troy oz of silver content. Canadian silver coin values based only on total silver value and weight. Does not include any copper value or weight. Resultant values will be rounded to two or more decimal places depending on length. * In 1967, some of the Canadian dimes and quarters were minted in 80% silver while the remainder were minted in 50% silver. The RCM minted about 50 million of these beautiful silver quarters. The silver variety is actually quite common and not a rare coin by any measure. However, a small number (believed to be about 5-10) of pattern 1967 quarters were struck in nickel. These coins are quite rare and typically fetch $3,000-$5,000 at auction. *** The Canadian Mint issued two compositions of the dime and quarter in 1967 and again in 1968. In 1967, there is the standard 80% silver/20% copper variety and the 50% silver/50% copper type. In mid-year 1968, they changed the quarter and dime from 50% silver/50% copper to a 99% nickel composition.
The 1965 and 1966 are .800 silver. 1967 has both .500 and .800 silver. Both weigh 5.83 grams new. With a coin with no wear, you can calculate what the scrap value. For all Canadian .800 silver coins, there is .6 oz of Ag for every $1 face, so 4 of the 1965 or 66 quarters would be .6 oz times the current silver value. At the time of writing, a US 90% silver quarter (dated 1964 or earlier) is worth $5.55 for the silver content. A Canadian quarter dated 1920-1967 80% silver quarter is worth $4.63, a Canadian quarter dated 1967-1968 that is 50% silver is worth $2.89. 1967 was an interesting year in Canadian coins. Halfway through production, they switched both the dime and the quarter from .800 fine silver to .500 fine (80% pure to 50% pure), and you can’t tell the difference. 1967 dime (.800 fine) 0.060 troy oz of silver content. 1967 dime (.500 fine) 0.0375 troy oz of silver content. Canadian silver coin values based only on total silver value and weight. Does not include any copper value or weight. Resultant values will be rounded to two or more decimal places depending on length. * In 1967, some of the Canadian dimes and quarters were minted in 80% silver while the remainder were minted in 50% silver.
The 1965 and 1966 are .800 silver. 1967 has both .500 and .800 silver. Both weigh 5.83 grams new. With a coin with no wear, you can calculate what the scrap value. For all Canadian .800 silver coins, there is .6 oz of Ag for every $1 face, so 4 of the 1965 or 66 quarters would be .6 oz times the current silver value. At the time of writing, a US 90% silver quarter (dated 1964 or earlier) is worth $5.55 for the silver content. A Canadian quarter dated 1920-1967 80% silver quarter is worth $4.63, a Canadian quarter dated 1967-1968 that is 50% silver is worth $2.89. 1967 was an interesting year in Canadian coins. Halfway through production, they switched both the dime and the quarter from .800 fine silver to .500 fine (80% pure to 50% pure), and you can’t tell the difference. 1967 dime (.800 fine) 0.060 troy oz of silver content. 1967 dime (.500 fine) 0.0375 troy oz of silver content. Canadian silver coin values based only on total silver value and weight. Does not include any copper value or weight. Resultant values will be rounded to two or more decimal places depending on length. * In 1967, some of the Canadian dimes and quarters were minted in 80% silver while the remainder were minted in 50% silver. The RCM minted about 50 million of these beautiful silver quarters. The silver variety is actually quite common and not a rare coin by any measure. However, a small number (believed to be about 5-10) of pattern 1967 quarters were struck in nickel. These coins are quite rare and typically fetch $3,000-$5,000 at auction. *** The Canadian Mint issued two compositions of the dime and quarter in 1967 and again in 1968. In 1967, there is the standard 80% silver/20% copper variety and the 50% silver/50% copper type. In mid-year 1968, they changed the quarter and dime from 50% silver/50% copper to a 99% nickel composition. Up until 1966 the Canadian Mint used 80% actual silver in it’s composition of the dollar coin, in 1967 this value changed to 50% actual silver and half way through 1968 they stopped making ‘silver dollar coins’ with actual silver altogether, they fact is that today a Canadian dollar coins is actually made up of 91.5% nickel and 8.5% bronze.
Denomination, 25 cents. Currency rate, 0.25 CAD = 0.18 USD. Year, 1967. Subject, 100th Anniversary of Canada. Period, Queen Elizabeth II (1953 - 2019). Coin type, Commemorative coins. Ruler, Elizabeth II. Composition, Silver 0.800. Find out the value of your old gold and silver coins, minted series and collector items. To the right is a Canada Silver 50 cent piece (1967 and earlier) worth at least $5 each. Note. The nickel half dollars will stick to a magnet. The above left Legal tender coins produced by the Royal Canadian Mint when real silver was used in the minting process. Condition and year will vary; Purity guaranteed by the Royal Canadian Mint (each coin is 80% pure silver) Explore melt values of world silver coins including Canadian coins and Mexican coins. Canada Silver Dime (1967-1968), 50% Silver, 2.3328, 0.0375, $0.47. Canada Canada Silver Quarter (1967-1968), 50% Silver, 5.8319, 0.0937, $1.16. Details, specifications, values and general information for the 1967 Elizabeth II Canadian Silver 25 Cents. Also find this coin and many others at the best prices. The following site contains some info on Canadian JS coins from 1967. www. silvercoinstoday.com/silver-coin-price-guides/canadian-silver-coin-values Unfortunately, I find that part of this info seems incomplete. But maybe I'm
But keep on the lookout for 1947 and 1948 coins – these rare years sell for much more than melt value. 1967: Dollars and half-dollars – 80% silver. Quarters and dimes: ~ half 80%, half 50% (they switched the purity these coins were made Calgary Coin Gallery offers a selection of Canada 25 cent (quarters) in all price ranges. In recent years the value of silver has risen dramatically and this significantly affects the base price at which I can offer silver quarters. At the time I am writing this silver is about worth of silver. 1967 and 1968 quarters are slightly less. 6 Oct 2014 The 1967 centennial quarter is a common date, currently worth just over $3 for the silver (as of 3 August 2014). Hope someone has more information about this coin and its possible value. However with the 1967 Canadian dollar there are many "error" coins with the goose in multiple off angles including completely upside down. Royal Canadian Mint · Canada Currencies · Royal Canadian Mint. MENU. ROYAL CANADIAN MINT BY YEARS. 1954-1967 MRC BULLION - ADN · CANADIAN PAPER MONEY · WORLD SILVER COINS · WORLD GOLD COIN · ROLL. 27 Mar 2014 After 1964, the quarter is just made of nickel and copper and worth just 25 cents. The US dime was also changed from 90 percent silver in 1964 to nickel and copper. So, older dimes are worth more than 10 cents.