1969/70-P and 70-D Dime Varieties


No one is exactly sure how this variety happened, but the US Mint–under pressure then to produce billions of coins–mistakenly used the reverse of a 1968-S Proof Dime for the reverse of 1969-P, 1970-P and 1970-D Roosevelt business strikes. The official variety is known as 1969 rev. of 1968, 1970 rev. of 1968 and 1970-D rev. of 1968 (FS-901).

The FS-901 refers to a catalog number identified by Bill Fivaz and J.T. Stanton, co-authors of the Cherrypickers’ Guide to Rare Die Varieties of United States Coins.

“Reverse of 1968” on these three dimes is a numismatic variety recognized by all major holdering companies. The 1968 reverse shows two distinct, well-defined, and sharp valleys in the torch flame, whereas the business strike reverse has a less defined, blurry flame.



The 1969-P FS-901 is generally considered the rarest of the three with about 15 holdered by PCGS. 1970-D FS-901 is the most common with about 30 holdered by PCGS. About 20 for the 1970 rev. of 68.

All of these varieties can be found in rolls, although they are very scarce.

While this is a rare variety by population data, PCGS values remain low, ranging from $50-100.

You can find the variety on eBay selling about the same or higher, although the coins are unholdered, as in these examples:


If you are a dime roll hunter, keep your eyes peeled for other Roosevelt dime varieties:

1946 DDO FS-101

1946 DDO FS-102

1982 No Mintmark – Weak

1982 No Mintmark – Strong

As you can see, there are not many varieties for Roosevelt dimes, but click the links above and go to Proxiblog for articles explaining die markers.

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You can find more information about types, varieties, errors, grading, bidding and buying in Coin News Updated: The Essential Guide to Online Bidding. Please consider buying or gifting the work for a friend, as it underwrites this hobbyist blog. Thank you.