Canada | |
Value | 0.50 Canadian dollar |
---|---|
Mass | 6.9 g |
Diameter | 27.13 mm |
Thickness | 1.95 mm |
Edge | Milled |
Composition | Nickel-plated steel 93.15% steel, 4.75% Cu, 2.1% Ni plating |
Years of minting | 1870–present |
Catalogue number | – |
Obverse | |
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Design | Charles III, King of Canada |
Designer | Steven Rosati |
Design date | 2023 |
Reverse | |
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Design | Canadian coat of arms |
Designer | Thomas Shingles |
Design date | 1959, updated 1997 |
The Canadian fifty-cent coin (French: pièce de cinquante cents) is a Canadian coin worth 50 cents. The coin's reverse depicts the coat of arms of Canada. At the opening ceremonies for the Ottawa branch of the Royal Mint, held on January 2, 1908, Governor General Earl Grey struck the Dominion of Canada's first domestically produced coin. It was a silver fifty-cent coin bearing the effigy of King Edward VII.
Though it is regularly minted, it is not made in large quantities (approximate annual average production of 150,000), and since 2004 has only been available to the public directly from the mint.[1]
A largely unsuccessful attempt was made by the Royal Canadian Mint to promote the use of the coin when a special edition was released in 2002 marking the 50th anniversary of the accession of Elizabeth II to the throne. After this failed promotion, the mint stopped distributing 50-cent coins to banks and now sells them only in rolls or in coin sets available directly from their Numismatic Department at twice their face value, or $25 per roll of 25 coins.[2][3]
The mint's website lists the 2007 coat of arms 50-cent coin as "rarely seen yet replete with tradition".[4][5]
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