Browse by series
Every US coin design we track, grouped by series — each with its key dates, grading notes, and where to buy graded examples across the major marketplaces.
Morgan
5 coinsStruck 1878–1904 and again in 1921, the Morgan Dollar is the most collected US silver dollar — famous for its Carson City (CC) issues and a deep run of key dates.
View series →Saint-Gaudens
5 coinsWidely called the most beautiful US coin, the Saint-Gaudens $20 Double Eagle (1907–1933) was designed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens at Theodore Roosevelt’s request.
View series →Barber
3 coinsCharles Barber’s Liberty Head design ran on the dime, quarter, and half dollar from 1892 to 1916 — a classic type-set cornerstone.
View series →Draped Bust
3 coinsThe Draped Bust design (1795–1807) graced America’s earliest silver, including the legendary 1804 dollar — the "King of American Coins."
View series →Indian Head
3 coinsBela Lyon Pratt’s incuse Indian Head design and the Saint-Gaudens Indian Eagle define America’s pre-1933 gold quarter eagles, half eagles, and eagles.
View series →Lincoln
3 coinsThe Lincoln cent has run since 1909 — the longest-lived US design. Early keys like the 1909-S VDB and 1914-D anchor the series.
View series →Peace
3 coinsMinted 1921–1935 to commemorate peace after WWI, the Peace Dollar pairs an Art-Deco Liberty with a perched eagle. The 1921 high relief is the standout first-year issue.
View series →Walking Liberty
3 coinsAdolph Weinman’s Walking Liberty half dollar (1916–1947) is a design so admired it returned on the modern American Silver Eagle.
View series →American Silver Eagle
2 coinsThe American Silver Eagle (since 1986) is the US Mint’s flagship bullion coin, with proof keys like the 1995-W commanding strong premiums.
View series →Buffalo
2 coinsJames Earle Fraser’s Buffalo (Indian Head) nickel (1913–1938) is a quintessentially American design, prized for overdates and the 1937-D 3-legged error.
View series →Franklin
2 coinsThe Franklin half dollar (1948–1963) features Ben Franklin and the Liberty Bell — a short, affordable, and popular silver series.
View series →Liberty Nickel
2 coinsThe Liberty Head "V" nickel (1883–1913) is famous for the five clandestine 1913 examples, among the most valuable US coins.
View series →Mercury
2 coinsThe "Mercury" dime (1916–1945) actually depicts Liberty in a winged cap. The 1916-D is its blue-chip key date.
View series →American Gold Eagle
1 coinThe American Gold Eagle (since 1986) is the official US gold bullion coin, carrying Saint-Gaudens’ Liberty on the obverse.
View series →Baseball HOF
1 coinBrowse graded Baseball HOF coins, with grading notes and where to buy across the major marketplaces.
View series →Flowing Hair
1 coinThe Flowing Hair dollar (1794–1795) was America’s first silver dollar — among the most historic of all US coins.
View series →Flying Eagle
1 coinThe Flying Eagle cent (1856–1858) launched the small-cent era; the 1856 is a celebrated rarity.
View series →Gold Dollar
1 coinThe gold dollar (1849–1889) is the smallest US gold coin, struck in three distinct types.
View series →Indian Head Cent
1 coinThe Indian Head cent (1859–1909) bridges the small-cent era; the 1877 is its premier key date.
View series →Isabella Commemorative
1 coinBrowse graded Isabella Commemorative coins, with grading notes and where to buy across the major marketplaces.
View series →Jefferson
1 coinThe Jefferson nickel (since 1938) is a long, affordable series; the 1950-D is its standout low-mintage key.
View series →Liberty Head
1 coinThe Liberty Head (Coronet) design defined US gold for much of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
View series →Olympic Commemorative
1 coinBrowse graded Olympic Commemorative coins, with grading notes and where to buy across the major marketplaces.
View series →Seated Liberty
1 coinChristian Gobrecht’s Seated Liberty design spanned most US silver from 1836–1891 — a 19th-century type-set staple.
View series →Standing Liberty
1 coinHermon MacNeil’s Standing Liberty quarter (1916–1930) is a short, artistic series led by the scarce 1916 first-year issue.
View series →Three Cent Silver
1 coinThe three-cent silver "trime" (1851–1873) is the smallest US silver coin, made to buy three-cent postage stamps.
View series →Three Dollar
1 coinThe odd $3 gold piece (1854–1889) is a one-of-a-kind denomination prized by type collectors.
View series →Trade Dollar
1 coinThe Trade Dollar (1873–1885) was struck for commerce with Asia; Carson City issues and proof-only late dates are the keys.
View series →Twenty Cent
1 coinThe short-lived twenty-cent piece (1875–1878) was quickly abandoned for looking too much like a quarter.
View series →Two Cent
1 coinThe two-cent piece (1864–1873) was the first US coin to carry the motto "In God We Trust."
View series →Washington
1 coinThe Washington quarter began in 1932 for Washington’s 200th birthday; the 1932-D and 1932-S are its key first-year dates.
View series →