Washington, June 20, 2026, 13:02 EDT
- The U.S. Mint is rolling out a one-year coin series for the 250th anniversary of U.S. independence, featuring both new circulating coin designs and collector coins at higher prices.
- The U.S. Mint will restart sales of the 1776-2026 Proof American Silver Eagle on June 24, after the first batch sold out in minutes.
- Dealers say these coins could have strong sentimental value, but warn buyers not to count on Mint premiums leading to investment returns.
U.S. Mint’s 250th-anniversary coin lineup is spilling into the busy collector season. Proof American Silver Eagle sales restart next week. Two reverse-proof silver dollars are set for July.
The timing is key because the Mint plans to use the Semiquincentennial, marking 250 years of U.S. independence, to run two tracks: regular circulating designs hitting banks and consumers, plus special and premium numismatic products for collectors. The Mint’s media kit calls it a one-year-only celebration of the nation’s founding.
The U.S. Mint started shipping 2026 Semiquincentennial circulating coins on Jan. 5, rolling out new versions of the dime, half dollar, and the first of five quarter dollars. Most circulating coins will carry redesigned looks for just one year, the Mint said, under the authority given by the Circulating Collectible Coin Redesign Act of 2020.
The Mint’s circulating program features five new quarters focused on U.S. history, plus a new dime and half dollar. Coins will also get “1776 ~ 2026” dual dating. Program materials show the 2026 Native American $1 coin marks the Oneidas’ help at Valley Forge, with Polly Cooper, who aided the Continental Army, on the design. United States Mint
Charlie Erthal from Scotsman Coin & Jewelry mentioned designs like the Mayflower, Independence Hall and Liberty Bell, according to First Alert 4. The report also quoted U.S. Mint Director Paul Hollis, who said the Mint ships big volumes of coins to the Federal Reserve, which then sends them out to banks.
Collector demand looks stronger. CoinNews said Friday the Mint will restart sales of the 2026-W Proof American Silver Eagle at about 7:30 a.m. ET on June 24, after the first batch sold out in about 17 minutes when it launched Feb. 26. According to the report, total sales hit 299,639 coins through June 14, out of a 500,000-coin mintage cap.
The Silver Eagle is selling for $173 on the Mint’s site, but it was shown as unavailable Saturday. This version features a Liberty Bell “250” privy mark, the dates “1776 ~ 2026,” one troy ounce of .999 fine silver, and a West Point “W” mint mark. United States Mint
On July 9, the Mint plans to release the 2026 Morgan and Peace Silver Dollar reverse-proof coins at noon ET as separate issues. With reverse proofs, the flat background is frosted and the raised design shines with a mirror-like finish. That’s the opposite of the usual proof style.
The Mint set the Morgan reverse-proof dollar at $173, with a mintage of 250,000 and a household limit of 10. The coin, struck in Philadelphia, shows the 1776-2026 dual date and features a Liberty Bell privy mark.
The Peace reverse-proof dollar keeps the price, mintage cap, and household limit unchanged. The Mint says Liberty appears on the obverse, while the reverse shows an eagle at rest with an olive branch, the word “PEACE” below. The coin uses Anthony de Francisci’s Peace Dollar design. United States Mint
The 2026 Morgan and Peace silver dollar releases will see both classic 1921 designs return for the anniversary, CoinWeek reported. The U.S. Mint plans to sell them as separate products instead of a two-coin set later. The Mint relaunched the modern Morgan and Peace Dollar series in 2021, celebrating the transition from the Morgan Dollar’s last issue to the debut of the Peace Dollar.
But the rush from collectors doesn’t guarantee the coins will turn a profit. “You might not count on this as money maker,” Erthal told First Alert 4. He said these issues could end up worth more as personal keepsakes than resale, since Mint products often come with hefty premiums. https://www.firstalert4.com
Buyer risk centers on this. Demand can hold up for some low-supply coins, mainly around launch, but resale prices often sag after the initial rush or if the Mint pushes more inventory to the stated cap. The Semiquincentennial Silver Proof Set is listed at $245 and was showing as currently unavailable on the Mint’s website, so some anniversary sets move fast. But that listing doesn’t guarantee long-term prices will stay up.