1982-P 10C, FB (Regular Strike)

Series: Roosevelt Dimes 1965 to Date

PCGS MS67+FB

PCGS MS67+FB

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PCGS MS67+FB

PCGS MS67+FB

PCGS MS67FB

PCGS MS67FB

PCGS #:
85161
Designer:
John R. Sinnock
Edge:
Reeded
Diameter:
17.90 millimeters
Weight:
2.27 grams
Mintage:
519,475,000
Mint:
Philadelphia
Metal:
75% Copper, 25% Nickel over a pure Copper center
Current Auctions - PCGS Graded
Current Auctions - NGC Graded
For Sale Now at Collectors Corner - PCGS Graded
For Sale Now at Collectors Corner - NGC Graded

Rarity and Survival Estimates Learn More

Grades Survival
Estimate
Numismatic
Rarity
Relative Rarity
By Type
Relative Rarity
By Series
All Grades 5,194,750 R-1.0 12 / 45 TIE 12 / 45 TIE
60 or Better 5,194,750 R-1.0 12 / 45 TIE 12 / 45 TIE
65 or Better 259,737 R-1.8 32 / 45 TIE 32 / 45 TIE
Survival Estimate
All Grades 5,194,750
60 or Better 5,194,750
65 or Better 259,737
Numismatic Rarity
All Grades R-1.0
60 or Better R-1.0
65 or Better R-1.8
Relative Rarity By Type All Specs in this Type
All Grades 12 / 45 TIE
60 or Better 12 / 45 TIE
65 or Better 32 / 45 TIE
Relative Rarity By Series All Specs in this Series
All Grades 12 / 45 TIE
60 or Better 12 / 45 TIE
65 or Better 32 / 45 TIE

Condition Census What Is This?

Pos Grade Image Pedigree and History
1 PCGS MS67+FB

"The Neon Lights Collection," GreatCollections, September 28, 2025, Lot 1933515 - $1,743.75; "The RickJones (2) Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Iridescent peacock toning blends with shades of gold and blue. The left obverse rim and the top of the "L" in LIBERTY are softly impressed.

1 PCGS MS67+FB

"The Halcyon Collection" (PCGS Set Registry).

1 PCGS MS67+FB

The obverse displays streaks of gold, russet, and ice-blue toning, with hints of magenta and green along the borders. The reverse shows pronounced iridescent toning in blended ice-blue, green, gold, and magenta. A small tick is visible on the torch, to the immediate left of the "U" in PLURIBUS.

4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, February 8, 2026, Lot 2054131 - $346.50. Shimmering iridescence shows patination in gold and ice-blue, with highlights of blue and magenta along the obverse borders. The date, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp. A pinhead-sized planchet void is located to the right of the base of the olive branch, and a toning spot nearly touches the "D" in DIME.

4 PCGS MS67FB

"The Terry's Toners Collection of U.S. Coins," GreatCollections, December 28, 2025, Lot 1889531 - $168.12. Iridescent toning; the obverse is dominated by ice-blue, oyster-pearlescent cream, and red. A toning spot is visible on the bust truncation, and a pin-sized tick sits to the left of the earlobe. The date, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp. Reverse hues trend toward yellow-gold, with blue along the periphery and an orange toning spot above the "UN" in UNITED. Diagonal tick to the left of US in PLURIBUS.

4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, August 14, 2022, Lot 1113963 - $2,058.75; GreatCollections, July 21, 2024, Lot 1621530 - $1,040.63; "The long3218 Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Faint champagne patination. LIBERTY and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp, though the base of the 2 shows slight strike weakness. A copper-colored toning spot is located above the "DI" in DIME, and a light horizontal mark appears on the torch between the "B" and "U" in PLURIBUS.

4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, September 10, 2017, Lot 475104 - $1,080; GreatCollections, January 16, 2022, Lot 1095140 - $1,040.63. Faint champagne patination. The date, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp.

4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, March 21, 2021, Lot 956047 - $1,012.50; "The RickJones Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Brilliant. The date, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp.

4 PCGS MS67FB

As PCGS MS67FB #84018560. "The Centurion Collection," GreatCollections, April 1, 2018, Lot 536567 - $604.13. As PCGS MS67FB #35447974. GreatCollections, May 5, 2019, Lot 700763 - $362.25; "The cat62081 Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Patches of gold toning. Edges of of IN, TR, and the 2 are sunk. Two faint marks to the left of the ear.

4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, January 22, 2017, Lot 42375 - $604.38; eBay, September 15, 2018, - $1,499.42"The D.L. Hansen Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Dusk-light blue and russet toning on the obverse, with gold dominating the reverse. The edge lettering and date are sharply struck.

4 PCGS MS67FB

"The AJBRAMI Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Faint gold patination. Flattening is noted at the top of "LI," and the right side of the "2" merges into the border. A thin diagonal mark is visible above the first "A" in AMERICA.

#1 PCGS MS67+FB

"The Neon Lights Collection," GreatCollections, September 28, 2025, Lot 1933515 - $1,743.75; "The RickJones (2) Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Iridescent peacock toning blends with shades of gold and blue. The left obverse rim and the top of the "L" in LIBERTY are softly impressed.

#1 PCGS MS67+FB

"The Halcyon Collection" (PCGS Set Registry).

#1 PCGS MS67+FB

The obverse displays streaks of gold, russet, and ice-blue toning, with hints of magenta and green along the borders. The reverse shows pronounced iridescent toning in blended ice-blue, green, gold, and magenta. A small tick is visible on the torch, to the immediate left of the "U" in PLURIBUS.

#4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, February 8, 2026, Lot 2054131 - $346.50. Shimmering iridescence shows patination in gold and ice-blue, with highlights of blue and magenta along the obverse borders. The date, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp. A pinhead-sized planchet void is located to the right of the base of the olive branch, and a toning spot nearly touches the "D" in DIME.

#4 PCGS MS67FB

"The Terry's Toners Collection of U.S. Coins," GreatCollections, December 28, 2025, Lot 1889531 - $168.12. Iridescent toning; the obverse is dominated by ice-blue, oyster-pearlescent cream, and red. A toning spot is visible on the bust truncation, and a pin-sized tick sits to the left of the earlobe. The date, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp. Reverse hues trend toward yellow-gold, with blue along the periphery and an orange toning spot above the "UN" in UNITED. Diagonal tick to the left of US in PLURIBUS.

#4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, August 14, 2022, Lot 1113963 - $2,058.75; GreatCollections, July 21, 2024, Lot 1621530 - $1,040.63; "The long3218 Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Faint champagne patination. LIBERTY and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp, though the base of the 2 shows slight strike weakness. A copper-colored toning spot is located above the "DI" in DIME, and a light horizontal mark appears on the torch between the "B" and "U" in PLURIBUS.

#4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, September 10, 2017, Lot 475104 - $1,080; GreatCollections, January 16, 2022, Lot 1095140 - $1,040.63. Faint champagne patination. The date, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp.

#4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, March 21, 2021, Lot 956047 - $1,012.50; "The RickJones Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Brilliant. The date, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST are sharp.

#4 PCGS MS67FB

As PCGS MS67FB #84018560. "The Centurion Collection," GreatCollections, April 1, 2018, Lot 536567 - $604.13. As PCGS MS67FB #35447974. GreatCollections, May 5, 2019, Lot 700763 - $362.25; "The cat62081 Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Patches of gold toning. Edges of of IN, TR, and the 2 are sunk. Two faint marks to the left of the ear.

#4 PCGS MS67FB

GreatCollections, January 22, 2017, Lot 42375 - $604.38; eBay, September 15, 2018, - $1,499.42"The D.L. Hansen Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Dusk-light blue and russet toning on the obverse, with gold dominating the reverse. The edge lettering and date are sharply struck.

#4 PCGS MS67FB

"The AJBRAMI Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Faint gold patination. Flattening is noted at the top of "LI," and the right side of the "2" merges into the border. A thin diagonal mark is visible above the first "A" in AMERICA.

Charles Morgan:

1982-P Roosevelt Dime

Roosevelt Dimes minted since 1980 have carried a “P” mintmark. This fact is well-known to numismatists, though it is not necessarily familiar to the general public. From the Mint's inception, Philadelphia-struck coins bore no mintmark. This changed in 1838 when the opening of branch mints in Charlotte (C), Dahlonega (D), and New Orleans (O) required marks to identify the facility of origin. The tradition continued as facilities in San Francisco (S), Carson City (CC), and Denver (D) came online.

Interestingly, the Dahlonega and Denver Mints shared the same “D” mintmark. However, nearly a half-century of time separated their production, as Dahlonega closed in 1861 and Denver did not begin striking coins until 1906. This gap makes it impossible to confuse the two.

With the 1979 introduction of the Susan B. Anthony Dollar, the Mint sought to standardize mintmark usage by adding the “P” to the dollar. In 1980, this was expanded to include Philadelphia-struck nickels, dimes, quarters, and half dollars. The cent was spared because the Mint occasionally struck pennies for circulation at the San Francisco Mint and the West Point Bullion Depository. By omitting the mintmark, the Mint ensured these overflow runs remained indistinguishable from Philadelphia's output and were not hoarded by collectors.

The Mint intended for every 1982-P Roosevelt Dime (#5161) to be struck with a mintmark; famously, this was not the case.

Collecting the 1982-P and 1982 "No Mintmark" Roosevelt Dimes

The 1982-P Roosevelt Dime was struck during the first of two "Non-Mint Set Years." To cut costs, the Mint suspended sales of its popular Mint Set program, which had provided collectors a convenient way to acquire uncirculated examples of every denomination struck that year. The Treasury Department estimated that eliminating the program would save approximately $3.5 million annually, assuming collectors would find alternative sources for the coins.

While private businesses attempted to fill the gap, the usual "backstop" of 1-2 million government-issued sets was gone. This disruption has left today’s collectors with far fewer options when searching for top-population examples.

The Full Bands (FB) Designation

1982-P Roosevelt Dimes with Full Bands are not exactly scarce, but they are far from typical. According to the PCGS Population Report, only 36.8% of coins certified for this date earn the FB designation.

Note: It is likely this percentage is inflated in favor of Full Bands; submitters often prescreen their coins for high-quality strikes before sending them in for grading.

The 1982 “No Mintmark” Roosevelt Dime

The most notable dime from this era is the scarce “No Mintmark” variety, believed to have been produced by a single die. This occurred when a working die was accidentally put into service without the Philadelphia “P” mintmark. The error was discovered in late 1982—most famously at the Cedar Point amusement park in Sandusky, Ohio. Others were subsequently discovered in Pennsylvania.

The first three individuals credited with discovering the coins were Walter Placzwkis, Andrew Macdonald, and Lane Durkee. Walter Breen credited a dealer from Toledo with handling over 1,500 examples; PCGS's Jaime Hernandez later identified this dealer as Clyde Englehardt of the Toledo Coin Exchange.

Englehardt had been a full-time coin dealer since 1960 when he was thrust into the "No Mintmark" dime frenzy. In a conversation with Hernandez, Englehardt recalled that local dealers and bank tellers offered him the dimes in large quantities.

Most numismatic references categorize the 1982 “No Mintmark” into two classes: Strong and Weak. These terms describe the strike quality; the "Strong" version is nearly fully struck, while the "Weak" version features flattened outer design details. While some specialists collect both, the Strong “No Mintmark” is generally considered more numismatically significant.

While handling the coins, Englehardt found that the most efficient way to distinguish between Strong and Weak strike examples within coin rolls was by observing their thickness.

Interestingly, Englehardt claimed he never found a single example of the 1982 “No P” dime in circulation himself, despite being located in the heart of the region where the coins were most prevalent. While Englehardt marketed and sold nearly all the examples that crossed his desk, he generously donated specimens to both the National Numismatic Collection at the Smithsonian Institution and the American Numismatic Association’s Money Museum.

How Many "No Mintmark" Dimes Were Struck?

The exact number of 1982 “No Mintmark” Roosevelt Dimes in circulation is unknown, though some estimates suggest as many as 10,000 were released (out of approximately 75,000 to 150,000 struck). However, judging PCGS submission totals, it stands as the most-submitted clad Roosevelt Dime for grading outside of the 1996-W (#5189). Unlike that 1996 novelty, which was not intended for circulation, the “No Mintmark” is genuinely scarce and numismatically desirable. An ungraded example in Extra Fine condition typically finds a buyer at $60, while a Mint State "Gem" or better can command $300 or more.

The 1982 “No P” Roosevelt Dime is ranked #32 in the fifth edition of 100 Greatest U.S. Modern Coins by Scott Schechter and Jeff Garrett.

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