
The 10 cent coin was first introduced with decimalisation on 14 February 1966. The original reverse design has not been changed since the introduction.
All of the first issue of 10 cent coins in 1966 was produced at the Royal Mint, London. Since the first production from London, 10 cent coins have been produced by the Royal Australian Mint and the Royal Mint, Llantrisant.
| composition | 75% copper 25% nickel |
| shape | circular |
| edge | milled |
| mass (grams) | 5.65 |
| diameter (millimetres) | 23.60 |
| Reverse Design | Year and design details | Production details RAM = Royal Australian Mint |
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1966-present An impression of a lyrebird designed and sculpted by Stuart Devlin. |
1966: 30 million, RML |
No 10 cents were produced in 1986 or 1987. |
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| 1988: 48.1 million, RAM 1989: 43.5 million, RAM 1990: 25 million, RAM 1991: 4.8 million, RAM 1992: 46.7 million, RAM 1993: 23.1 million, RAM 1994: 43.7 million, RAM |
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No 10 cents were produced in 1995 or 1996 |
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1997: 5.7 million, RAM |
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Notes for using these tables: These are final mintages where the numbers have been published in an Annual Report and all coins have been issued. Items marked not available will be updated when they pass the Annual Report and issue test.