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2004-D

Dimes · Roosevelt Dimes · 1946–Present
Regular
Weight2.27 g
Diameter17.9 mm
MintDenver
StrikeCirculation strike
Mintage 1,159,000,000
EdgeReeded
Alignment↑↓ Coin
CompositionCopper-Nickel Clad (75% Cu, 25% Ni bonded to pure Cu core)
DesignerJohn R. Sinnock
Collector's Key IDCK-2294

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About this coinHistory

Denver delivered 1,159,000,000 Roosevelt dimes in 2004, a 17 percent recovery from the sub-billion 2003-D figure as Federal Reserve coin orders rebounded into the mid-decade commercial expansion. Denver remained below Philadelphia by roughly 169 million pieces for the year, a moderate P-D split closer to the late-1990s baseline than to the wider gaps of 1999 or 2002. The D mintmark sat above the date in its established position, the clad sandwich kept the 2.268-gram, 17.91-millimeter cupronickel-on-copper specification, and strike quality across the year ran clean on most working presses with no documented hub or die-break issues at the principal level.

Authentication on the 2004-D follows the routine clad-dime workflow: 2.268 grams on a calibrated scale, D mintmark sharp above the date under 10x magnification, and Full Bands evaluation across the two parallel bands at the torch midpoint. Full Bands, the grading designation that the two central torch bands show complete separation, is reasonably available on 2004-D from original Mint sets and bank-wrapped rolls because Denver's strike quality across the year held up. The FB premium concentrates at MS67 FB and finer where PCGS and NGC population reports thin enough to support registry-grade competition. The date carries no recognized RPM or doubled-die premium variety at Cherrypickers' principal listing.

The 2004-D circulates in heavy quantity at every base grade and trades at standard type-coin pricing through MS66. The condition-rarity tier opens at MS67 FB where the certified population thins to registry-relevant levels, and MS68 FB examples reach low four-figure territory at public auction when certified by a major service. Original Mint sets and bank-wrapped rolls remain the practical hunting ground for upgrade-grade material; the bulk of 1.16 billion pieces entered circulation rather than collector hands. The 2004-D classifies as regular at every tier, with collector interest concentrated on FB designations and registry-set competition rather than on date scarcity. For Denver's mid-2000s output trend, see the Roosevelt Dime series history.

Price guideReference

Reference data only — not an appraisal.

GradeDescriptionLowHigh
G-4 Good (G) $0.10 $0.10
VG-8 Very Good (VG) $0.10 $0.10
F-12 Fine (F) $0.10 $0.10
VF-20 Very Fine (VF) $0.10 $0.10
EF-40 Extremely Fine (EF) $0.10 $0.10
AU-50 About Uncirculated (AU) $0.10 $0.10
MS-60 Uncirculated (MS)
MS-63 Choice Uncirculated (MS)
Frequently Asked QuestionsFAQ
How much is a 2004-D Roosevelt Dime worth?
In Good condition it runs about $0.10, rising to roughly $0.10 in About Uncirculated. These are reference values, not an appraisal.
How many 2004-D Roosevelt Dimes were minted?
1,159,000,000 were struck.
What is a 2004-D Roosevelt Dime made of?
Copper-Nickel Clad (75% Cu, 25% Ni bonded to pure Cu core), weighing 2.27 g.
What is the melt value of a 2004-D Roosevelt Dime?
Its melt value is its metal content multiplied by the current spot price. See our melt calculator on the metals pages for a live figure.
Is the 2004-D Roosevelt Dime a key date?
It's a more common date overall, though scarcer die varieties may carry a premium — see the varieties list.