All Coin Series

49 series across five metal categories

Gold

5 series
American Gold Eagle
American Gold Eagle
1986–present

The American Gold Eagle launched alongside the Silver Eagle in 1986 and has been a continuous US Mint offering since then.

Liberty Head Gold
Liberty Head Gold
1849–1907

James B.

Indian Head Gold
Indian Head Gold
1907–1933

Bela Lyon Pratt designed the Indian Head quarter eagle ($2.

Saint-Gaudens Gold
Saint-Gaudens Gold
1907–1933

President Theodore Roosevelt commissioned Augustus Saint-Gaudens to redesign American coinage, and the $20 double eagle he produced is widely considered the most beautiful coin the US Mint ever made.

Britannia Gold
Britannia Gold
1987–present

The Royal Mint launched the Britannia gold coin in 1987, making it the UK's first official gold bullion coin.

Silver

28 series
Morgan Dollar
Morgan Dollar
1878–1921

The Morgan dollar was minted from 1878 to 1904, then for one final year in 1921 before the Peace dollar replaced it.

Peace Dollar
Peace Dollar
1921–1935

The Peace dollar arrived in late 1921 to mark the end of World War I.

Liberty Seated Dollar
Liberty Seated Dollar
1836–1873

Christian Gobrecht's Liberty Seated dollar ran from 1836 to 1873.

Trade Dollar
Trade Dollar
1873–1885

Congress authorized the trade dollar in 1873 specifically for commerce with China and other Asian markets, where Mexican silver pesos had long dominated.

Draped Bust Dollar
Draped Bust Dollar
1795–1803

The Draped Bust dollar was designed by Robert Scot in two types: a Small Eagle reverse from 1795 to 1798 and a Heraldic Eagle from 1798 to 1803.

Flowing Hair Dollar
Flowing Hair Dollar
1794–1795

The Flowing Hair dollar is the first silver dollar struck by the United States Mint, and few coins carry more historical weight.

Kennedy Half Dollar
Kennedy Half Dollar
1964–present

The Kennedy half dollar was rushed into production in early 1964, months after President Kennedy's assassination.

Franklin Half Dollar
Franklin Half Dollar
1948–1963

John R.

Walking Liberty Half Dollar
Walking Liberty Half Dollar
1916–1947

Adolph Weinman designed the Walking Liberty half dollar, and many collectors consider it the finest-looking coin the US Mint ever produced.

Barber Half Dollar
Barber Half Dollar
1892–1915

Charles Barber, then Chief Engraver of the US Mint, designed these half dollars along with matching dimes and quarters - the full "Barber coinage" introduced in 1892.

Liberty Seated Half Dollar
Liberty Seated Half Dollar
1839–1891

Christian Gobrecht's Liberty Seated half dollar was the standard 50-cent coin for over 50 years, from 1839 to 1891.

Capped Bust Half Dollar
Capped Bust Half Dollar
1807–1839

John Reich designed the Capped Bust half dollar in 1807, and it ran for over 30 years in two types: the "lettered edge" version through 1836, followed by a reeded-edge version as improved machinery arrived at the Mint.

Draped Bust Half Dollar
Draped Bust Half Dollar
1796–1807

Robert Scot designed the Draped Bust half dollar in two reverse types: a Small Eagle used only in 1796 and 1797, and a Heraldic Eagle from 1801 through 1807.

Flowing Hair Half Dollar
Flowing Hair Half Dollar
1794–1795

The Flowing Hair half dollar was among the first coins struck by the newly opened US Mint in Philadelphia.

Washington Quarter
Washington Quarter
1932–1964

The Washington quarter was originally conceived as a one-year commemorative for the 200th anniversary of Washington's birth - then kept in production permanently.

Standing Liberty Quarter
Standing Liberty Quarter
1916–1930

Hermon MacNeil's Standing Liberty quarter is one of the great designs of the early 20th century, though it had a complicated run.

Barber Quarter
Barber Quarter
1892–1916

Charles Barber designed the quarter as part of the 1892 coinage overhaul that also produced Barber dimes and half dollars.

Liberty Seated Quarter
Liberty Seated Quarter
1838–1891

The Liberty Seated quarter used Christian Gobrecht's design for over 50 years, with several modifications along the way.

Capped Bust Quarter
Capped Bust Quarter
1815–1838

John Reich designed the Capped Bust quarter, which replaced the Draped Bust type.

Draped Bust Quarter
Draped Bust Quarter
1796–1807

The Draped Bust quarter had an extremely short run, making it one of the thinnest series in American coinage.

Roosevelt Dime
Roosevelt Dime
1946–present

The Roosevelt dime was introduced in 1946, the year after FDR's death, replacing the Mercury dime.

Mercury Dime
Mercury Dime
1916–1945

Adolph Weinman designed the "Mercury" dime - though the figure actually depicts Liberty wearing a winged cap, not the Roman god Mercury.

Barber Dime
Barber Dime
1892–1916

Charles Barber's dime is the smallest of the three coins he designed in 1892.

Liberty Seated Dime
Liberty Seated Dime
1837–1891

The Liberty Seated dime is one of the longest-running dime series in US history, covering over 50 years with multiple design modifications.

Capped Bust Dime
Capped Bust Dime
1809–1837

The Capped Bust dime ran from 1809 to 1837, struck only at the Philadelphia Mint for almost its entire run.

Draped Bust Dime
Draped Bust Dime
1796–1807

The Draped Bust dime covered only about 12 years, with production inconsistent - some years saw no coinage at all.

American Silver Eagle
American Silver Eagle
1986–present

The American Silver Eagle has been the US Mint's flagship silver bullion coin since 1986.

Britannia Silver
Britannia Silver
1997–present

The Royal Mint introduced the silver Britannia in 1997, ten years after the gold version.

Platinum

1 series
Engelhard Platinum
Engelhard Platinum
Various

Engelhard was one of the major platinum producers in the US, and the company struck platinum bars in small quantities alongside its better-known silver output.

Palladium

1 series
Engelhard Palladium
Engelhard Palladium
Various

Engelhard's palladium output was even more limited than its platinum production - the company's core business was industrial applications of platinum group metals, and collector pieces were a small sideline.

Numismatic

14 series
Eisenhower Dollar
Eisenhower Dollar
1971–1978

Frank Gasparro designed the Eisenhower dollar, released in 1971 as the first dollar-sized coin in the US since the Peace dollar ended in 1935.

Susan B Anthony Dollar
Susan B Anthony Dollar
1979–1999

The Susan B.

SD
Sacagawea Dollar
2000–present

The Sacagawea dollar arrived in 2000 to replace the Susan B.

Presidential Dollar
Presidential Dollar
2007–2020

The Presidential dollar series issued four coins per year honoring US presidents in order of service, running from George Washington in 2007 through Ronald Reagan in 2016, with George H.

American Innovation Dollar
American Innovation Dollar
2018–present

The American Innovation dollar program launched in 2018 to highlight one innovation from each state, DC, and the five US territories - 56 designs total when complete in 2032.

America the Beautiful Quarter
America the Beautiful Quarter
2010–2021

America the Beautiful quarters replaced the State Quarter program in 2010 with 56 designs honoring national parks and historic sites, five per year through 2021.

State Quarter
State Quarter
1999–2008

The 50 State Quarters program ran from 1999 to 2008, issuing five new designs per year in the order states ratified the Constitution - Delaware first, Hawaii last.

Jefferson Nickel
Jefferson Nickel
1938–present

Felix Schlag won a public competition in 1938 to design the Jefferson nickel, which replaced the Buffalo nickel.

Buffalo Nickel
Buffalo Nickel
1913–1938

James Earle Fraser's Buffalo nickel ran from 1913 to 1938: a composite Indian portrait on one side, a bison named Black Diamond from the Central Park Zoo on the other.

Liberty Head Nickel
Liberty Head Nickel
1883–1913

Charles Barber designed the Liberty Head nickel, and it had a famously rocky start: the 1883 issue omitted "CENTS" on the reverse, and con artists quickly gold-plated them to pass as five-dollar gold pieces.

Shield Nickel
Shield Nickel
1866–1883

The Shield nickel was the first five-cent piece struck in copper-nickel alloy, introduced in 1866 after silver disappeared from circulation during the Civil War.

Lincoln Cent
Lincoln Cent
1909–present

Victor David Brenner designed the Lincoln cent for the centennial of Lincoln's birth in 1909 - the first US circulating coin to feature a real person rather than an allegorical figure.

Indian Head Cent
Indian Head Cent
1859–1909

James B.

Flying Eagle Cent
Flying Eagle Cent
1856–1858

The Flying Eagle cent was the US Mint's answer to a problem: the old large copper cent was too big and too expensive to produce, but switching to a small coin required an act of Congress.