2007 United States 10 Dollar Value
Expect a 2007 United States 10 Dollar to trade between about its melt value and well into four figures, driven almost entirely by grade. Certified examples in top grades can run far higher.
2007 United States 10 Dollar value by grade
| Grade | Estimated value |
|---|
Estimated retail range. Estimates are modeled from mintage rarity and metal content, not auction records. Actual sale prices vary with certification, eye appeal and market timing.
What is a 2007 United States 10 Dollar worth right now?
Pricing for the 2007 United States 10 Dollar depends on grade and current collector demand.
2007 United States 10 Dollar specifications
- Series
- United States Coinage
- Year
- 2007
- Mint mark
- None (Philadelphia)
- Mintage
- Not recorded
- Weight
- 7.211 g
- Diameter
- 26 mm
No mint mark? Here is why
The 2007 United States 10 Dollar comes from Philadelphia, which struck coins without a mint mark. If the spot where branch-mint coins show a letter is empty on your 2007, that is exactly as it should be.
What makes the 2007 United States 10 Dollar valuable
Context adds the final layer to the 2007 United States 10 Dollar. Documented United States coin types preserved in museum collections, with measured specifications for each date, denomination and mint. Owning this date means owning a piece of that story, and demand for the series as a whole sustains liquidity for every issue in it.
Without a firm mintage figure, the 2007 United States 10 Dollar trades on what actually turns up. Documented museum specimens give collectors a benchmark for authenticity and typical preservation.
Measured 2007 United States 10 Dollar specimens
1 physically measured 2007 United States 10 Dollar example in our reference database. Real measured weights and die axes let you authenticate a coin against the 7.211 g, 26 mm minting standard.
| Specimen | Weight | Diameter | Die axis | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 United States 10 Dollar #1 | 7.211 g | 26 mm | 12 h | - |
Specifications compiled from documented museum specimens. See our data & methodology page.