Morgan silver dollars span 1878 to 1921 across five mints — and their values range from silver melt (about $62–$90 per coin in early 2026) to more than $2 million for the finest-known 1893-S. This guide identifies every key date, Carson City rarity, and major VAM variety worth knowing, explains exactly what the GSA hoard did to the market, and tells you when professional grading changes the economics. Whether you inherited a box of Morgans or found a single coin, you will leave this page knowing precisely what you have and what to do next.
Most circulating Morgan dollars — the common Philadelphia, New Orleans, and San Francisco dates from 1878 through 1904, plus the entire 1921 issue — trade for silver melt plus a modest premium: roughly $70–$120 in circulated condition given early-2026 silver prices. The coins that dramatically exceed melt are a short list: 1893-S (mintage 100,000; G-4 starts at $3,500), 1889-CC (the 'King of Carson City Morgans'; MS-65+ CAC sold for $660,000 at Heritage in August 2023), 1895 Proof (proof-only issue; ~880 struck, PR-65 runs $100,000–$130,000), 1894-P (only 110,000 struck, G-4 around $783), 1893-CC (last Carson City Morgan ever), 1884-S (a brutal condition rarity; MS-68 brought $750,000 at Stack's Bowers in November 2020), and 1886-O (MS-67 DMPL sold $780,000 that same sale). The all-time auction record for any Morgan dollar is $2,086,875, paid for an 1893-S graded PCGS MS-67 CAC at GreatCollections in August 2021.
For most owners, the realistic picture is this: date and mint mark first, then condition. Any coin you suspect is a Carson City issue, a Philadelphia coin dated 1893–1895, or an uncirculated example with mirror-like fields deserves closer examination before you sell. For everything else, expect melt-to-two-times-melt in circulated grades. Certification above $200 raw value almost always makes economic sense for Morgan dollars. For current grade-by-grade pricing on every date and mint-mark combination, Coins-Value.com maintains the most current independent reference available.
Current Values
Values below are drawn from PCGS Price Guide, NGC Price Guide, Greysheet CPG retail midpoints, and recent Heritage, Stack's Bowers, and GreatCollections realized prices (2020–2026). Retail prices reflect dealer ask or recent auction hammer plus buyer's premium; wholesale (Greysheet bid) runs roughly 15–30% lower. Color designation (BN/RB/RD) does not apply to silver dollars. PL and DMPL figures are included where the dossier provides reliable public data.
| Date / Variety | G-4 to G-6 | F-12 to F-15 | XF-40 | MS-60 to MS-63 | MS-65 | Auction Record |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1893-S | $3,500–$3,760 | $5,500–$7,000 | $7,750–$10,000 | MS-60 ~$95,000–$130,000; MS-63 ~$302,500 | $600,000–$735,000 | $2,086,875 — PCGS MS-67 CAC, GreatCollections Aug 2021 |
| 1889-CC | $1,000–$1,400 | $1,500 CAC | $4,500–$5,500 | MS-63 ~$45,600 CAC | $288,000 (CPG); $660,000 MS-65+ CAC | $660,000 — PCGS MS-65+ CAC, Heritage Aug 15, 2023 |
| 1886-O | $77 (near melt) | ~$100 | ~$500 | MS-63 ~$5,000 | $184,000–$190,000 | $780,000 — PCGS MS-67 DMPL CAC, Stack's Bowers Nov 12, 2020 |
| 1884-S | $91 | ~$150 | $300–$700 | MS-60 ~$5,000–$8,000 | $259,700 | $750,000 — PCGS MS-68 CAC, Stack's Bowers Nov 12, 2020 |
| 1895 Proof | n/a (proof only) | PR-55–PR-58 ~$50,000–$70,000 | PR-60–PR-63 ~$65,000–$85,000 | n/a | PR-65 ~$100,000–$130,000 | $132,000 — PR-67 Cameo NGC CAC, Stack's Bowers Nov 2020 |
| 1879-CC | $629 | ~$900 | $2,000–$2,500 | MS-63 ~$10,000–$15,000 | $24,000 | $192,000 — PCGS MS-66+, Heritage Jan 12, 2023 |
| 1893-CC | $452 | $578–$654 | $2,400 (NGC XF-45 wholesale) | MS-60 ~$4,355; MS-63 ~$11,300 | ~$115,000 | Finest certified PCGS MS-66; no recent MS-65+ auction on record |
| 1893-O | ~$200 | ~$350 | ~$1,000 | MS-60 ~$3,000; MS-63 ~$10,000–$15,000 | $50,000+ | Only 10–20 examples estimated above MS-65 |
| 1894-P | $783 | $900–$1,200 | $1,500–$2,500 | MS-63 ~$10,000–$15,000; MS-64 ~$33,500 | $31,325–$50,000 | insufficient data — no recent MS-65 auction on record |
| 1892-CC | ~$400 | ~$500 | ~$900 | MS-63 ~$3,000 | $15,000–$25,000 | insufficient data |
| 1901-P DDR VAM-3 Shifted Eagle | $400–$500 | ~$700 | $2,000+ | MS-60 $10,000+; MS-61 $43,200 | insufficient data — finest is single MS-62+ | $43,200 — NGC MS-61, Heritage Jan 15, 2023 |
| 1891-CC | ~$200 | ~$250 | ~$400 | MS-63 ~$1,000 | $5,000–$7,000 | insufficient data |
| 1890-CC | ~$150 | ~$200 | ~$350 | MS-63 ~$900–$1,500 | $6,500–$8,500 (Tail Bar VAM-4 premium above this) | insufficient data |
| 1885-CC | ~$650 | ~$700 | ~$850 | MS-63 ~$900 | $2,200–$3,000 | insufficient data |
| 1881-CC | ~$500 | ~$600 | ~$750 | MS-63 ~$900 | $3,500–$5,000 | insufficient data |
| 1880-CC | ~$300–$500 | ~$500–$700 | ~$750 | MS-63 ~$900–$1,200 | $2,800–$5,000 | insufficient data |
| 1903-O | ~$330 | ~$370 | ~$450 | MS-63 ~$450; MS-64 ~$700 | $1,150–$1,250 | insufficient data |
| 1878-CC | $150–$200 | $200–$250 | $350–$500 | MS-60 ~$400; MS-63 ~$700 | $2,500–$5,000 | insufficient data |
| 1878 7/8 TF (Strong) | ~$50 | ~$60 | ~$100 | MS-63 ~$400 | $3,500–$5,000 | insufficient data |
| 1878 8 Tail Feathers | ~$40 | ~$45 | ~$60 | MS-63 ~$200–$300 | $1,500–$2,000 | insufficient data |
| 1882-CC | $164 | $182 (VF-20 Greysheet) | ~$250 | MS-63 ~$350 | $480–$585 | Heritage MS-65 PCGS $480–$504 (Jan 2024) |
| 1883-CC | $164 | $182 | ~$250 | MS-63 ~$300 | ~$525–$600 | insufficient data |
| 1884-CC | $164 | $182 | ~$250 | MS-63 ~$300 | ~$525–$600 | insufficient data |
| 1921-S | melt + ~$4 | melt + ~$5 | $29–$70 | $80–$200 | $1,500–$3,000 | $19,200 — PCGS MS-67, auction per PCGS records |
| 1921-D | melt + ~$4 | melt + ~$5 | $29–$50 | $60–$150 | $500–$1,500 | insufficient data |
| 1921 (P) | melt + ~$4 | melt + ~$5 | $29–$45 | $55–$120 | $300–$800 | 1921 Chapman Proof PR-67 $240,000 (Heritage May 2022) |
| 1881-S | melt + ~$10 | melt + ~$10 | ~$45 | MS-63 ~$80 | ~$200 (DMPL MS-65 ~$800–$1,500) | insufficient data |
Cells marked 'insufficient data' reflect grades where no reliable public pricing exists — typically the highest grade tiers for dates where population is one or two known examples. For common-date circulated Morgans not shown below, assume silver melt ($62–$90 depending on spot price in early 2026) plus a modest collector premium of $5–$25. For complete grade-by-grade pricing on every Morgan dollar date and mint mark, Coins-Value.com's Morgan dollar reference is the most current independent source.
Historical Context
The Morgan dollar exists because of a Congressional compromise, not public demand. The Coinage Act of 1873 — denounced by silver interests as the 'Crime of '73' — had ended free coinage of silver dollars. With Comstock Lode production flooding the silver market, western mining interests pressured Congress for relief. The result was the Bland–Allison Act of February 28, 1878, which forced the Treasury to purchase 2 to 4 million ounces of silver per month and strike it into standard silver dollars whether or not the public wanted them. Most Americans preferred paper silver certificates; the coins piled up in mint and Treasury vaults for decades. That single fact explains almost every supply anomaly in the series.
George T. Morgan, an English-born engraver hired by the U.S. Mint in 1876 under Chief Engraver William Barber, won the design competition. His Liberty head — laureate with wheat and cotton, 'LIBERTY' on the Phrygian cap, 13 stars and 'E PLURIBUS UNUM' around — was modeled by Philadelphia schoolteacher Anna Willess Williams. The reverse shows a heraldic eagle clutching arrows and an olive branch inside a wreath, with the mint mark above 'DO' in DOLLAR. Composition and physical specs were unchanged across the entire original run: 90% silver, 10% copper, 26.73 g, 38.1 mm diameter, reeded edge, 0.77344 troy oz of pure silver.
Five mints contributed. Philadelphia (no mint mark) struck Morgans every year of the run except 1895, which was proof-only. Carson City (CC) ran 1878–1885, took a four-year hiatus, and returned 1889–1893 before closing as a coinage facility forever — total CC Morgan output was roughly 13.7 million coins, the smallest share of any mint. New Orleans (O) ran 1879–1904. San Francisco (S) ran 1878–1904 and again in 1921. Denver (D) struck Morgans in only one year: 1921. Total circulation mintage across all five mints exceeded 657 million coins.
The series ended in 1904 when the silver supply from the Bland–Allison Act and its successor (the Sherman Silver Purchase Act) was exhausted. It resumed in 1921 only because the Pittman Act of 1918 had melted exactly 270,232,722 Morgans to ship silver bullion to Great Britain during World War I, and Congress required the Treasury to replace them. The 1921 coins look noticeably different — flatter, with softer detail in Liberty's hair and the eagle's feathers — because the original hubs had been destroyed in 1910 when nobody expected further Morgan coinage. New, shallower-relief hubs were cut from scratch.
When the Treasury suspended silver-certificate redemption on March 25, 1964 — silver had risen above $1.29/oz, making the dollar's metal content worth more than face — an inventory of its remaining stock found approximately 3,000 bags totaling about 3 million silver dollars, almost entirely Carson City Morgans. Congress directed disposal through the General Services Administration; seven public mail-bid sales ran from October 1972 through July 1980, grossing about $100 million and permanently reshaping the Morgan market. Dates heavily represented in the hoard (1882-CC, 1883-CC, 1884-CC) became among the most common high-grade Morgans available today. Dates virtually absent (1889-CC with 1 coin, 1892-CC with 1 coin, 1893-CC with 1 coin) were confirmed as the genuine Carson City rarities they remain.
The Key Dates
The entries below cover every date and mint-mark combination that commands a meaningful premium above silver melt, plus the major variety issues that change a common coin's economics. Mintage figures come from PCGS CoinFacts, NGC Coin Explorer, and the dossier research (with caveats noted where sources disagree). Retail values reflect PCGS Price Guide, NGC Price Guide, Greysheet CPG midpoints, and recent Heritage, Stack's Bowers, and GreatCollections realized prices from 2020–2026; wholesale (dealer bid) runs roughly 15–30% below these retail figures.
The 1893-S is the Morgan dollar every collector knows by heart. Its 100,000-coin mintage is the lowest of any business-strike Morgan, and survival in problem-free grades is genuinely thin: most examples show heavy bag marks, weak striking at the centers, and evidence of hard circulation in the silver-rush West. PCGS estimates roughly 5,000–6,000 survivors across all grades, with perhaps 10–15 examples in Mint State. The coin's legend is reinforced by its auction history — the finest known (PCGS MS-67 CAC, Vermeule/Jack Lee/Coronet pedigree) sold for $2,086,875 at GreatCollections on August 29, 2021, the all-time record for any Morgan dollar. A second MS-65 brought $735,000 at Sotheby's in May 2018.
Circulated examples are valuable in every grade. G-4 retails at $3,500–$3,760; XF-40 reaches $7,750–$10,000 (a PCGS XF-40 auction realized $7,750). MS-63 is approximately $302,500. The jump from circulated to Mint State is enormous, and the jump within Mint State is even more dramatic. This is also one of the most counterfeited Morgans in existence — NGC lists it among its 'Top 10 Most Counterfeited Coins.' The two main approaches are adding an 'S' to a 1893-P or altering the last digit of an 1892-S or 1895-S. Every 1893-S should be in a PCGS or NGC holder.
The 1889-CC has earned its 'King of Carson City' designation not from mintage alone — at 350,000 it is actually not the lowest CC mintage — but from the near-total absence of Mint State survivors. When the GSA hoard was inventoried in 1972, only a single 1889-CC was found among the nearly 2.9 million Carson City Morgans dispersed in the seven sales. Every other date had at least 4,000 coins in the hoard; most had over 100,000. That absence confirmed what the market had long suspected: almost every 1889-CC circulated heavily, and there was no surviving vault stock.
Values reflect that scarcity. G-4 runs $1,000–$1,400; F-12 with CAC endorsement realized $1,500 at Heritage in January 2024; XF-40 with CAC sold for $4,800 at the same sale; MS-63 reached $45,600 (Heritage January 2024, CAC). The Mint State population thins dramatically above MS-64, where values jump to $50,000–$160,000; an MS-65+ CAC example sold for $660,000 at Heritage's ANA Signature sale on August 15, 2023. Counterfeiting is a real concern — buy only certified examples from PCGS, NGC, ANACS, ICG, or CACG.
The 1895 Philadelphia is the only Morgan dollar year where no business strikes are believed to exist — the Mint records show a production figure, but no circulating examples have ever been authenticated. What survived are approximately 880 proof coins, struck with the characteristic squared rims, fully mirrored fields, and cameo devices of a proof strike. This makes the 1895 proof-only status the defining fact of the entire series, and the coin commands prices no other proof Morgan approaches.
PR-55 to PR-58 examples run $50,000–$70,000; PR-60 to PR-63 range from $65,000 to $85,000. A PR-67 Cameo NGC CAC example sold for $132,000 at Stack's Bowers in November 2020 (Larry H. Miller Collection); a PR-67 example brought $78,000 at Stack's Bowers' Summer 2022 Global Showcase. Population of surviving examples is thin at PR-65 and above. Condition and sharpness of the cameo contrast between fields and devices drive premiums aggressively in this upper range.
Nothing about the 1886-O's mintage of 10.7 million suggests anything unusual — it looks like a run-of-the-mill common date. In circulated grades it is exactly that: G-4 runs near melt ($77 per Coins-Value), F-12 is perhaps $100. The surprise begins around MS-63 ($5,000) and becomes shocking by MS-65 ($184,000–$190,000). The explanation is that New Orleans Morgans were routinely weakly struck and stored in harsh conditions; gem survivors are extraordinarily rare. A Deep Mirror Prooflike gem is essentially the rarest coin in the series at that grade level.
The apex of known examples is a single PCGS MS-67 DMPL CAC example from the Wayne Miller–Larry H. Miller Collection, which sold for $780,000 at Stack's Bowers on November 12, 2020. Wayne Miller himself called it 'the most spectacular Morgan dollar now known.' For comparison, a non-prooflike MS-65 of this date trades at $184,000, and an MS-67 DMPL realized $231,000 at the Schenkel sale in 1990. The MS-64-to-MS-65 jump alone is roughly $15,000–$25,000 to $184,000 — one of the steepest condition cliffs in the series.
Like the 1886-O, the 1884-S is a coin that looks common from a mintage perspective but is genuinely scarce in Mint State — and becomes one of the great rarities in gem and better grades. Circulated examples are plentiful enough: G-4 runs about $91 (Coin Value Checker), F-12 is approximately $150. Even through VF and EF the coin is affordable. The cliff appears at Mint State: MS-60 starts at $5,000–$8,000, MS-63 runs into low five figures, and MS-65 reaches approximately $259,700.
The sole finest certified example — PCGS MS-68 CAC, the 'Bodway–Jack Lee–Larry H. Miller specimen' — sold for $750,000 at Stack's Bowers on November 12, 2020 (Larry H. Miller Collection). Coin dealer Wayne Miller called it 'a wonder coin.' No Prooflike or Deep Mirror Prooflike examples are known for this date. The condition-rarity dynamic is similar to the 1886-O: these coins circulated in the West rather than sitting in Treasury vaults, and bag handling destroyed most surviving Mint-State survivors.
Only the proof-only 1895 has a lower Philadelphia mintage than the 1894-P's 110,000 business strikes. The coin is genuinely scarce from the worn end of the spectrum all the way to gem Mint State. G-4 retails at approximately $783 (Coins-Value); F-12 runs $900–$1,200; XF-40 reaches $1,500–$2,500. MS-63 falls in the $10,000–$15,000 range, and MS-64 hits approximately $33,500.
Counterfeiters target this date by removing the 'O' or 'S' mint mark from an 1894-O or 1894-S. The genuine 1894-P business strikes are all VAM-3 and show specific die markers: three parallel die scratches right of the 'M' in Morgan's initial; a horizontal die gouge above the eagle's right toe; minor doubling in IN GOD WE TRUST; die lines within LIBERTY; and a large slanted die-polish mark in the right foot of the R in LIBERTY. These diagnostics make it possible to distinguish genuine coins from altered examples — but only with a certified holder from PCGS or NGC should significant money change hands.
The Carson City Mint struck its final Morgan dollars in 1893, and the 1893-CC stands as the last-ever CC Morgan — a distinction that resonates with collectors drawn to the Old West narrative of the series. The 677,000 mintage is not the lowest CC figure, but the coin's near-total absence from the GSA hoard (only 1 coin, effectively zero) means virtually no Mint State inventory survived into the modern market. Most examples show the weak central striking and heavy bag marks typical of the period.
Values: G-4 approximately $452 (APMEX); F-12 $578–$654; XF-45 NGC wholesale approximately $2,400 (Greysheet); MS-60 around $4,355; MS-63 about $11,300; MS-64 approximately $21,500. The MS-65 runs about $115,000 (APMEX guide); the finest certified is PCGS MS-66. The MS-64-to-MS-65 jump — from roughly $21,500 to $115,000 — illustrates why grading makes economic sense for any 1893-CC you believe is in near-gem condition.
One of the lowest mintages in the entire New Orleans Morgan run, the 1893-O compounds its scarcity with the weak strikes and bag-mark-prone handling typical of the New Orleans Mint in that era. Circulated examples are modestly priced — approximately $200 in G-4, $350 in F-12, $1,000 in XF-40 — but the Mint State market is thin and expensive: MS-60 runs about $3,000, MS-63 climbs to $10,000–$15,000, and MS-65 requires $50,000 or more. PCGS estimates only 10–20 examples survive above MS-65.
Like the 1893-S and 1889-CC, this date is actively counterfeited — CoinWeek has documented a fake 1893-O struck with a C4 reverse hub that the New Orleans Mint did not actually adopt until 1901. A Morgan specialist can identify the reverse hub type; for any buyer, a PCGS or NGC slab is the only reliable protection.
The 1879-CC had just 4,123 coins in the GSA hoard — the second-lowest CC showing after the 1889/1892/1893-CC dates with essentially zero presence. That thin hoard representation means the 1879-CC is genuinely scarce in Mint State and commands strong premiums, particularly for Prooflike and Deep Mirror Prooflike examples. A PCGS MS-66+ example realized $192,000 at Heritage's FUN Signature sale on January 12, 2023 (Lot 3776); an MS-64+ DMPL CAC (sole finest at PCGS in DMPL) brought $120,000 at Heritage on January 10, 2023 (Lot 3777).
Circulated values: G-4 approximately $629 (Coins-Value); F-12 around $900; XF-40 approximately $2,000–$2,500. MS-63 runs $10,000–$15,000. There are two reverse-die varieties of the 1879-CC: the standard reverse and the 'Capped Die' (filled mint mark), the latter commanding a premium among variety collectors.
The 1885-CC has the lowest mintage of any Carson City Morgan at 228,000, and by that measure alone it reads as the scarcest CC date. But the GSA hoard contained 148,285 examples — meaning more than 65% of all 1885-CCs ever struck survived uncirculated in Treasury vaults and were dispersed through the GSA sales. As a result, the 1885-CC is readily available in MS-60 through MS-63 and is not the expensive date its mintage figure implies. Circulated values: G-4 approximately $650, F-12 about $700, XF-40 around $850. MS-63 is approximately $900, and MS-65 runs $2,200–$3,000 — affordable by Carson City standards.
Like the 1893-CC and 1889-CC, the 1892-CC had essentially zero presence in the GSA hoard — only 1 coin. That absence confirms the date as a genuine semi-key in Mint State despite its apparently comfortable 1.35-million mintage. Circulated examples are obtainable: G-4 around $400, F-12 about $500, XF-40 approximately $900. But MS-63 jumps to $3,000, and MS-65 runs $15,000–$25,000, with very high premiums for Prooflike and DMPL examples where populations are thin.
The 1891-CC is a genuine semi-key with modest but real GSA representation (5,687 coins). In circulated grades: G-4 around $200, F-12 approximately $250, XF-40 about $400. MS-63 reaches approximately $1,000 and MS-65 falls in the $5,000–$7,000 range. The coin's numismatic interest is amplified by the 'Spitting Eagle' VAM-3 — a die chip below the eagle's beak that creates the visual impression of a spitting bird. Highly recognizable under a loupe, and one of the more popular Hot 50 varieties. The die chip is consistent across all Spitting Eagle examples and is not to be confused with damage or a scratch.
With only 3,949 coins in the GSA hoard, the 1890-CC is significantly scarcer in Mint State than its 2.3-million mintage suggests. Circulated values: G-4 approximately $150, F-12 about $200, XF-40 around $350. MS-63 runs $900–$1,500, and MS-65 reaches $6,500–$8,500. The most sought variety is VAM-4, the 'Tail Bar' — a strong die scrape or gouge running from the eagle's tail feather area toward the wreath. The Tail Bar is a Hot 50 variety and commands a meaningful premium over generic 1890-CC examples, particularly in circulated grades where it is identifiable without grading-service attribution.
The 1901-P VAM-3 Doubled Die Reverse — known as the 'Shifted Eagle' — is by consensus the strongest doubled reverse die in the entire Morgan series. The eagle, wreath, and IN GOD WE TRUST are all visibly doubled to the south without any magnification required. PCGS estimates only about 1,000 known examples, nearly all circulated; the Mint State population is approximately 10 coins. This is not a VAM that requires a loupe to detect — if you have an 1901-P and the doubling is obvious to the naked eye on the reverse, you likely have VAM-3.
Values in circulated grades: approximately $400–$500 in G-4, about $700 in F-12, over $2,000 in XF-40. Mint State is dramatic: MS-60 exceeds $10,000; an MS-61 NGC sold for $43,200 at Heritage on January 15, 2023; an MS-62 PCGS brought $72,000 at Stack's Bowers on October 30, 2018. The finest certified is a single MS-62+ at PCGS — MS-65 is essentially unknown and would represent one of the great discoveries in Morgan dollar numismatics.
When George Morgan prepared his original reverse design, he gave the eagle 8 tail feathers. After production began, it was noted that actual eagles have 7, and the reverse was corrected. The 1878 8 Tail Feather coins were struck early in the year — they represent Morgan's first issued design — and carry a collector premium for that historical significance. Values are modest compared to key dates: G-4 around $40, F-12 approximately $45, XF-40 about $60. MS-63 runs $200–$300, and MS-65 reaches $1,500–$2,000. Multiple VAM sub-varieties exist within the 8TF category, the most dramatic being VAM 7 'Tripled E' (triple impression of E in LIBERTY) and VAM 14.18 'Broken 7.'
As the Mint corrected the 8-feather design, some dies were reworked by punching 7-feather impressions over existing 8-feather dies. The result is a 'ghost' of the 8th tail feather visible behind the 7 — the hallmark of the 7/8 Tail Feather transitional variety. PCGS catalogues this across multiple VAMs (31–44). A well-defined 7/8TF commands 2x–5x the price of a generic 1878-P in circulated grades and more in Mint State. The 'Strong' sub-variety (most ghost feathers visible) at MS-63 runs approximately $400, and MS-65 reaches $3,500–$5,000.
The 1881-CC has one of the lower CC mintages at 296,000, but the GSA hoard contained 147,485 examples — roughly half the original production survived uncirculated. This makes the 1881-CC readily affordable in MS-63 (approximately $900) and MS-65 ($3,500–$5,000), a situation that would surprise anyone who looked at the raw mintage alone. Circulated values: G-4 about $500, F-12 around $600, XF-40 approximately $750. Prooflike and DMPL examples carry premiums; the date is frequently offered as a 'rare Carson City Morgan' in television and direct-mail advertising, which overstates its scarcity.
The 1881-S is a genuinely common coin in circulated grades — trading at melt plus a few dollars in G-4 and F-12. Its significance is as the single most accessible Deep Mirror Prooflike Morgan available: MS-65 DMPL examples trade under $1,500, making the 1881-S the entry-level date for collectors who want to experience the dramatic visual impact of DMPL designation without spending five figures. Non-DMPL MS-63 is approximately $80, and a standard MS-65 runs about $200. The Prooflike designation at MS-65 reaches roughly $350. The 1881-S is a canonical example for grading-service education on what PL and DMPL mean in practice.
The 1884-CC is the textbook example of how a hoard permanently re-prices a coin. Of its 1,136,000-coin mintage, approximately 962,638 — roughly 85% of all 1884-CCs ever struck — survived uncirculated in Treasury vaults and were dispersed through the GSA sales. As a result, the 1884-CC is the most common Carson City Morgan in Mint State: MS-63 runs approximately $300, and MS-65 is about $525–$600. Greysheet lists G-4, F-12, and XF-40 all at roughly $164–$250. The coin is heavily marketed as a 'rare Carson City coin' in TV shopping channels and bullion dealer ads — a claim that does not survive contact with population reports.
The 1903-O is one of numismatics' most instructive cautionary tales. For decades before 1962, it was considered one of the greatest Morgan rarities — dealers paid hundreds of dollars for circulated examples. The reason: the coins had all vanished into Treasury vaults, and nobody knew they were there. When the Treasury released its remaining silver dollar stocks beginning in 1962, the 1903-O flooded onto the market. Today it trades at roughly $330–$370 in circulated grades, $450 in MS-63, and $1,150–$1,250 in MS-65. Prooflike MS-65 reaches $3,000–$3,750; DMPL MS-65 runs $6,750–$8,500. The date remains collectible as a piece of numismatic history but is no longer a financial rarity.
The 1921 Philadelphia Morgan has the highest single-year mintage in the series — 44.69 million — and its flat, mushy appearance (a result of new, shallow-relief hubs cut after the originals were destroyed in 1910) makes it immediately recognizable to experienced collectors. Circulated examples trade at essentially silver melt plus $4–$5. XF-40 runs $29–$45 (NGC Price Guide); MS-60 to MS-63 is $55–$120; MS-65 reaches $300–$800. The 1921 is one of the most commonly advertised coins in television shopping channels, where it is frequently marketed as a 'historic last-year Morgan dollar' at prices well above its genuine market value. The exception is the 1921 Chapman Proof — only approximately 40 were struck for Philadelphia dealer Henry Chapman — which in PCGS PR-67 (finest certified) realized $240,000 at Heritage on May 8, 2022.
Denver struck Morgans in only one year — 1921 — giving the 1921-D a mild premium for its unique D-only status in the series. Circulated examples trade at melt plus $4–$5, just like the Philadelphia 1921. XF-40 runs $29–$50 (NGC Price Guide); MS-60 to MS-63 is approximately $60–$150; MS-65 reaches $500–$1,500. Prooflike and DMPL data are insufficient for confident pricing. The 1921-D is a complete set requirement and the only way a date-and-mint collection includes a Denver Morgan, which gives it modest collector demand above what its mintage alone would suggest.
The 1921-S is the scarcest of the three 1921 issues in genuine gem condition. Circulated examples trade at melt plus $4–$5; XF-40 runs $29–$70 (NGC Price Guide); MS-60 to MS-63 is $80–$200. MS-65 reaches $1,500–$3,000, and the PCGS auction record at MS-67 is $19,200. The premium over the 1921-P emerges meaningfully only at MS-66 and above, where population reports show the 1921-S is appreciably rarer in top-pop grades than its Philadelphia counterpart.
The five 2021 Morgan dollar issues — Philadelphia no mark, D, S, and Philadelphia-struck CC privy and O privy — were struck under the 2020 Silver Dollar Coin Anniversary Act to mark the Morgan dollar centennial. Each had a maximum mintage of 175,000 at an $85 issue price. The CC and O privy issues sold out in approximately 30 minutes on May 24, 2021. The CC privy has emerged as the most-demanded 2021 variety in the secondary market. MS-69 graded examples run $300–$400; MS-70 examples reach $500–$800; complete five-coin MS-70 sets reach approximately $1,995 (Rare Collectibles TV). The coins contain 0.858 troy oz of 99.9% fine silver — slightly more silver than the 0.77344 troy oz in the original 1878–1921 Morgans.
Several Morgan dollar dates appear regularly in television shopping channels, bullion dealer ads, and direct-mail campaigns with language that implies rarity their population data does not support. Owners who purchased these coins at inflated prices deserve an honest accounting.
If you are staring at a Morgan with a 'CC' on the reverse and are not certain of the date, or if you think you might have an uncirculated example but cannot tell where it falls on the grade spectrum, the Assay app can help. Photograph the obverse and reverse, and Assay returns a structured identification with per-field confidence labels — high, medium, or low — so you know exactly which details the app is confident about and which ones need a second look. The result includes a four-bucket condition assessment (Well Worn / Lightly Worn / Almost New / Mint Condition), a Low / Typical / High value range for each bucket, and a Keep / Sell / Grade verdict based on where your coin lands. Counterfeit-risk alerts surface for high-risk dates — including the 1893-S, 1889-CC, and 1894-P — with specific authentication tips tied to each coin.
Assay covers more than 20,000 U.S. and Canadian coins, including the full Morgan dollar series across all five mints and the major VAM varieties that carry a premium. The database is bundled on-device, so lookups work offline — useful when you are sorting through a box of inherited silver and your connection is unreliable. A 7-day free trial unlocks everything; after that, $9.99/month or $59.99/year. The Manual Lookup feature — a cascade selector through Country, Denomination, Year, Design, and Mint — is permanently free and requires no subscription.
Mint Errors and Die Varieties
The Morgan dollar has the most developed die-variety market in U.S. numismatics. The Van Allen–Mallis (VAM) system catalogues approximately 2,000 die marriages, but the premiums worth chasing are concentrated in a short list: the PCGS 'Top 100' and Jeff Oxman's 'Hot 50.' For any suspected VAM variety, professional attribution — either through PCGS or NGC VarietyPlus — is essential before paying a premium, particularly for varieties above $500 where authentication risk is meaningful.
Per the VAM reference, the 1901-P VAM-3 is 'the strongest doubled reverse die of the Morgan series.' The doubling of the eagle, wreath, and IN GOD WE TRUST to the south is visible to the naked eye — no loupe required. PCGS estimates approximately 1,000 known examples, the vast majority circulated. Only about 10 Mint State examples have been confirmed. An MS-61 NGC sold for $43,200 at Heritage on January 15, 2023; an MS-62 PCGS brought $72,000 at Stack's Bowers on October 30, 2018. The finest known is a single MS-62+ at PCGS — MS-65 is essentially unknown and would be a landmark discovery.
Despite the dramatic appearance, most circulated Shifted Eagle coins trade at modest premiums relative to their Mint State counterparts: G-4 runs $400–$500, F-12 about $700, XF-40 over $2,000. The Mint State jump is where the economics become striking. Any suspected 1901-P with visible reverse doubling should be submitted for VAM attribution before sale.
Morgan's original reverse gave the eagle 8 tail feathers; the corrected design has 7. Coins struck during the correction show a '7 over 8' feather pattern — ghost points of the 8th feather visible behind the 7 — catalogued by PCGS as VAMs 31–44 for the 7/8TF. A well-defined 7/8TF commands 2x–5x the price of a generic 1878-P in circulated grades and more in Mint State; the 'Strong' sub-variety at MS-65 runs $3,500–$5,000. The 8TF itself is historically significant as Morgan's first issued design. Notable sub-varieties include VAM 7 'Tripled E' (triple impression of E in LIBERTY) and VAM 14.18 'Broken 7.'
Count tail feathers first: 8 feathers = 8TF, the original design. Then look for ghost points behind the 7 on coins labeled as 7TF — if you see the ghosted 8th feather, you may have a 7/8TF. The diagnostic is clearest at 10x magnification.
A strong die scrape or gouge running from the eagle's tail-feather area toward the wreath characterizes the 1890-CC VAM-4 'Tail Bar.' The variety is a Hot 50 entry and identifiable under moderate magnification — the bar is a die-state artifact, raised and consistent, not a scratch or damage mark. It adds a meaningful premium over the generic 1890-CC in all grades. The 1890-CC already commands a premium over hoard-common CC dates (only 3,949 coins in the GSA hoard); the Tail Bar variant pushes values further, particularly in circulated grades where collectors actively cherrypick raw coins.
A small die chip immediately below the eagle's beak on the reverse creates the visual impression that the eagle is spitting — giving the VAM-3 its popular name. The chip is a positive raised element, not a scratch, and appears in a consistent location across all Spitting Eagle examples. It is one of the most recognizable Hot 50 varieties to identify in the field without special equipment, and it commands a modest but real premium over generic 1891-CC examples across all grades. Authentication via PCGS or NGC VarietyPlus attribution confirms the designation and supports the price premium at auction.
The 1888-O VAM-4 'Hot Lips' is a Top 100 Morgan variety showing doubled lips on Liberty's portrait — visible at moderate magnification and one of the more striking doubled-die effects in the series. The 1888-O itself is a condition rarity (common circulated, scarce in gem), which compounds the interest of the Hot Lips variety. Circulated examples with confirmed VAM-4 attribution trade at a meaningful premium over generic 1888-O; Mint State attribution examples are very scarce and command strong collector interest.
The 1900-O/CC overmintmark shows the remnant of a 'CC' mint-mark punch beneath the final 'O.' It is well documented within the VAM literature and carries a consistent premium over the plain 1900-O across all grades. The ghost 'CC' is visible under 10x magnification in the middle of the 'O' and is one of the classic overmintmarks in the Morgan dollar series. PCGS and NGC both attribute and designate this variety in their holder descriptions.
Authentication
Morgan dollar counterfeiting is not theoretical — it is an active, well-documented problem concentrated on a short list of high-value dates. NGC's own 'Top 10 Most Counterfeited Coins' list includes the 1893-S. Knowing the specific diagnostics for each at-risk date, understanding when professional certification is the only protection, and recognizing what coin cleaning does to value are the three practical competencies that protect Morgan dollar owners.
1893-S fakes take two approaches: adding an 'S' mint mark to a Philadelphia 1893 (no mint mark) or altering the last digit of an 1892-S or 1895-S so it reads '1893.' All genuine 1893-S Morgans were struck from a single obverse die paired with only two reverse dies — a die-marker protocol that authentication experts use to flag fakes. On altered-date counterfeits, the '3' often shows a straight upper-right serif where the genuine digit has a curved form. Compare any raw 1893-S directly to PCGS TrueView photos of certified examples before transacting.
1894-P fakes typically come from removing the 'O' or 'S' mint mark from an 1894-O or 1894-S. The genuine 1894-P business strikes are all VAM-3 and carry specific die markers: three parallel die scratches right of Morgan's 'M' initial, a horizontal die gouge above the eagle's right toe, minor doubling in IN GOD WE TRUST, die lines within LIBERTY, and a large slanted die-polish mark in the right foot of the R in LIBERTY. A removed mint-mark scar is typically visible under a 10x loupe in the form of slightly disturbed metal above 'DO' in DOLLAR.
1893-CC and 1889-CC fakes are created by adding 'CC' marks to Philadelphia coins. The added mint mark typically shows discolored metal around it and misshapen interior curves on the Cs. Even in circulated grades these dates are worth hundreds to thousands of dollars — which makes raw examples attractive targets. The only reliable protection is a PCGS, NGC, ANACS, ICG, or CACG holder. 1894-O counterfeits from Asia are distinguishable by weight (~26.93 g vs. genuine 26.73 g) and by finer, sharper reeding (about 20–25% more reeds) — a kitchen jewelry scale accurate to 0.01 g and a 10x loupe can catch these. 1899-O Micro O examples are increasingly believed to be contemporary period counterfeits, not U.S. Mint products — check current NGC and PCGS attribution guidance before paying any premium.
The practical rule for Morgan dollars: pay $30–$60 per coin for PCGS or NGC standard-tier grading only when the certified value clears roughly 3x your raw cost plus the grading fee. The authentication guarantee for key dates changes this calculus — for the dates below, grading is justified regardless of condition because the guarantee itself has value.
| Coin / Situation | Grade it? | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Common-date circulated (1878–1904 P/S/O, 1921) | No | Raw is fine; grading destroys the margin on $70–$150 coins |
| Common date you believe is MS-63 or better | Probably | Grade if raw retail is at least $200; slabbed prices jump sharply at MS-64+ |
| Any suspected key date (1893-S, 1889-CC, 1893-O, 1893-CC, 1894-P, 1895 proof, 1879-CC) | Always | Authentication guarantee alone justifies the fee; never sell raw |
| 1884-S or 1886-O believed MS-60 or finer | Always | Condition rarity; MS-63 to MS-65 jump is 10x or more |
| Suspected Top 100 or Hot 50 VAM variety | Yes | Request VAM attribution from PCGS or NGC VarietyPlus; attribution adds significant value |
| Original GSA holder with coin inside | Consider | PCGS now offers GSA-compatible holder; preserves pedigree premium for scarcer CC dates |
CAC (Certified Acceptance Corporation) stickers and CACG (CAC Grading) holders add 10–50% to high-end Morgan dollars at auction — particularly for MS-65 and finer examples of key dates. The CAC endorsement signals that an independent expert reviewed the coin and found it solid for the grade. For any coin above $5,000, CAC submission after PCGS or NGC grading is worth considering.
Cleaning a Morgan dollar permanently reduces its value, typically by 30–70% depending on the severity. Both PCGS and NGC will designate cleaned coins as 'Genuine — Cleaned' or assign Details grading (e.g. 'XF Details, Cleaned'). These holders sell at substantial discounts to problem-free examples: even an '1893-S — Genuine, XF Details, Cleaned' trades for materially less than a problem-free VF-20 in a standard holder. The loss compounds on key dates where the numismatic premium is enormous.
Cleaning is detectable under a loupe: look for fine parallel hairlines (from cloth polishing), an unnaturally bright or 'blast white' surface inconsistent with the coin's wear level, and loss of original toning in the recesses. Toning — rainbow peripheral color, mottled gold, or deep steel — is desirable on Morgan dollars and adds value. A coin that has obviously been dipped in a commercial silver cleaner will show uniform brightness with no toning differentiation between devices and fields; CAC and serious collectors penalize this aggressively. If your Morgan is dirty, leave it alone. A light soak in pure acetone (to remove PVC residue only, not toning) is the only intervention safe for an unskilled owner, and even that is better left to a conservator.
The Auction Record
The 2020 Larry H. Miller Collection dispersal at Stack's Bowers was the defining Morgan dollar market event of the early 2020s: three coins — the 1886-O MS-67 DMPL, the 1884-S MS-68, and the 1892-S MS-68 — reset benchmarks for their respective dates. The 2021 GreatCollections sale of the 1893-S MS-67 CAC then established the all-time record for any Morgan dollar at $2,086,875. The Heritage 2022 and 2023 ANA and FUN sales filled out the premium Carson City market. All prices below include buyer's premium.
| Date | Coin | Grade / Holder | Price | Auction House | Provenance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aug 29, 2021 | 1893-S Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-67 CAC | $2,086,875 | GreatCollections | Vermeule / Jack Lee / Coronet pedigree; Item #1032590 |
| Nov 12, 2020 | 1886-O Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-67 DMPL CAC | $780,000 | Stack's Bowers | Wayne Miller–Larry H. Miller Collection; called 'the most spectacular Morgan dollar now known' |
| Nov 12, 2020 | 1884-S Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-68 CAC | $750,000 | Stack's Bowers | Bodway–Jack Lee–Larry H. Miller specimen; called 'a wonder coin' by Wayne Miller |
| Nov 12, 2020 | 1896-S Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-69 CAC | $720,000 | Stack's Bowers | Larry H. Miller Collection; sole finest known |
| Nov 12, 2020 | 1892-S Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-68 | $630,000 | Stack's Bowers | Jack Lee specimen; Larry H. Miller Collection, Lot 6358 |
| Aug 15, 2023 | 1889-CC Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-65+ CAC | $660,000 | Heritage Auctions | ANA Signature sale |
| Aug 24, 2022 | 1892-S Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-67+ CAC | $552,000 | Heritage Auctions | Bodway–Carter–Jack Lee–Ralph Stone pedigree; ANA Signature, Lot 3971 |
| May 8, 2022 | 1921 (P) Chapman Proof | PCGS PR-67 | $240,000 | Heritage Auctions | Central States Signature; finest certified |
| Jan 12, 2023 | 1879-CC Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-66+ | $192,000 | Heritage Auctions | FUN Signature, Lot 3776 |
| Jan 10, 2023 | 1879-CC Morgan Dollar | PCGS MS-64+ DMPL CAC | $120,000 | Heritage Auctions | FUN Signature, Lot 3777; sole finest at PCGS in DMPL |
| Nov 2020 | 1895 Proof Morgan Dollar | PR-67 Cameo NGC CAC | $132,000 | Stack's Bowers | Larry H. Miller Collection |
| Jan 15, 2023 | 1901-P DDR VAM-3 Shifted Eagle | NGC MS-61 | $43,200 | Heritage Auctions | FUN Signature |
Myth vs Reality
Morgan dollars are among the most heavily marketed coins in American numismatics — television shopping channels, direct-mail dealers, and online video ads regularly make claims about rarity and value that don't match the actual market. The following corrections come directly from verifiable auction records, population reports, and GSA hoard documentation.
Action Steps
Whether you inherited a single coin or a bag of 20, the path from 'I have Morgan dollars' to 'I got the right price' follows a predictable sequence. Skipping steps — especially the identification step — is how owners sell key dates for melt value or pay for grading on coins that don't justify the fee.
Lay each coin flat under good light. The mint mark is on the reverse just above the 'DO' in DOLLAR. No mark = Philadelphia; CC = Carson City; O = New Orleans; S = San Francisco; D = Denver. Write each combination down — '1884-CC,' '1921-P,' etc. Don't assume you know the date by look or feel; misread dates on Carson City coins are common and costly.
Any Morgan from this list warrants individual professional examination before sale: 1893-S, 1889-CC, 1895 (no mint mark, looks like a proof with mirrored fields), 1894-P (no mint mark, very low mintage), 1893-CC, 1893-O, 1879-CC, 1884-S (if uncirculated or near-uncirculated), 1886-O (if Mint State). If you have an 1878-P with 8 tail feathers on the reverse eagle, that is also worth separate attention. Or use the Assay app's Manual Lookup to quickly run through your date-mint combinations and flag which ones fall into premium territory — the lookup is permanently free and works offline.
For each non-key date, assess condition without wishful thinking. A coin with any wear at the high points (Liberty's cheek, the eagle's breast) is circulated — it will trade in the G through XF range. Mint State means literally no wear, only contact marks and bag abrasions. The distinction between 'looks shiny' and 'actually Mint State' is one that grading services make with finality. Common dates in circulated condition are worth silver melt plus a modest premium; don't pay grading fees on them. Coins with apparent Mint State surfaces and rainbow or gold toning should be evaluated for grading.
For any key date you are considering buying raw, or any coin whose surfaces look unusual, run the basic home checks: weigh to 0.01 g accuracy (genuine Morgan = 26.73 g, allow ±0.1 g); measure diameter (38.1 mm); test with a magnet (silver is non-magnetic — any pull indicates fake). Examine the mint-mark area under a 10x loupe for tooling marks or discolored metal. These tests catch the most common fakes; they do not replace certification for high-value dates.
PCGS and NGC are the primary services for Morgan dollars; ANACS and ICG are acceptable for lower-value coins. For VAM variety attribution, request PCGS VarietyPlus or NGC VarietyPlus at submission — standard grading fees typically apply plus a small surcharge. If you have a coin in an original GSA plastic holder, PCGS offers a special GSA-compatible grading holder that allows certification without breaking the original packaging — worth using for scarcer CC dates (1879-CC, 1890-CC, 1891-CC) where the GSA pedigree adds premium. CAC submission after grading is worth considering for any coin above $5,000.
Common-date circulated Morgans sell easily through local coin dealers (expect 60–70% of guide), eBay (more work, higher realized price), or coin shows. Key dates and gem examples belong at Heritage Auctions, Stack's Bowers, or GreatCollections — the major houses attract the deepest pools of advanced collectors and registry-set builders who pay full retail. Direct dealer offers for key dates should be compared to recent Heritage and Stack's Bowers realized prices before accepting. Never sell a suspected key date at a 'silver buying' event where the buyer is paying by weight.
Before accepting any offer or listing at any price, verify current market values against an independent source. Avoid CoinTrackers and generic 'value' websites that frequently publish optimistic figures disconnected from recent auction results. For complete grade-by-grade pricing on any U.S. coin, Coins-Value.com maintains the most comprehensive independent value reference available, with 20,000+ U.S. and Canadian coin entries.
Frequently Asked
Silver melt for a genuine Morgan dollar runs $62–$90 in early 2026 depending on spot price (0.77344 troy oz of silver at current prices). Any coin outside the short list of key dates (1893-S, 1889-CC, 1894-P, 1895 proof, 1893-CC, 1893-O, 1879-CC, 1884-S in Mint State, 1886-O in Mint State) will trade at melt plus a modest premium in circulated grades. The mint mark and exact date are the first things to check — a 'CC' mark does not automatically mean significant value, but the specific date matters enormously.
The 1893-S is the series key — G-4 starts at $3,500, and the finest known sold for $2,086,875 at GreatCollections in August 2021. The 1889-CC ('King of CC Morgans') runs $1,000–$1,400 in G-4 and $660,000 for an MS-65+ CAC. The 1895 proof-only issue runs $50,000+ in any grade. Condition rarities like the 1884-S (MS-68 = $750,000) and 1886-O (MS-67 DMPL = $780,000) look cheap in circulated grades but become extraordinary in gem Mint State. The 1894-P (110,000 mintage) starts at $783 in G-4.
'CC' stands for Carson City, Nevada — the mint that struck Morgans from 1878–1885 and 1889–1893, producing only about 13.7 million coins total across 13 dates. The mint mark appears on the reverse just above 'DO' in DOLLAR. Carson City Morgans carry premiums in every grade for their historical connection to Comstock Lode silver. However, several CC dates (1882-CC, 1883-CC, 1884-CC) are common in Mint State because large quantities survived in the GSA hoard — 'CC' alone is not a rarity guarantee.
Most circulated 1921 Morgans — Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco — trade at silver melt plus $4–$5. XF-40 runs $29–$70 depending on mint mark. The 1921 has the highest combined mintage of any Morgan year (about 86.7 million coins across three mints). It is routinely overhyped in TV advertising as a 'historic last-year coin.' The exception is the 1921 Chapman Proof — only approximately 40 struck — which in PCGS PR-67 realized $240,000 at Heritage in May 2022.
'GSA' Morgans are Carson City coins sold by the U.S. General Services Administration in seven mail-bid sales from October 1972 to July 1980, dispersing roughly 2.9 million CC Morgans from Treasury vaults. The coins came in distinctive hard plastic two-part holders printed 'CARSON CITY UNCIRCULATED SILVER DOLLAR.' Original GSA-packaged coins with the Certificate of Authenticity (COA) trade at a premium, especially for the scarcer 1879-CC, 1890-CC, and 1891-CC dates. PCGS offers a special GSA-compatible holder so coins can be graded without destroying the original packaging.
The practical rule: grade only if the certified value clears roughly 3x your raw cost plus the $30–$60 grading fee. For any suspected key date — 1893-S, 1889-CC, 1893-O, 1893-CC, 1894-P, 1895 proof, 1879-CC, 1884-S in Mint State — always certify, because the authentication guarantee alone is worth the fee. For common circulated dates (most 1878–1904 P, S, and O coins; all 1921 P/D/S in circulated grades), grading destroys the margin. Suspected Top 100 or Hot 50 VAM varieties should go to PCGS VarietyPlus or NGC VarietyPlus with the standard submission.
VAM is shorthand for Van Allen–Mallis, the die-variety reference for Morgan and Peace dollars. About 2,000 die marriages are catalogued, but premiums concentrate in the 'Top 100' (Fey/Oxman) and 'Hot 50' (Oxman) lists. The most valuable include the 1901-P VAM-3 'Shifted Eagle' (MS-61 sold $43,200), the 1878 7/8 Tail Feather varieties, the 1888-O 'Hot Lips' doubled die, the 1890-CC 'Tail Bar,' and the 1891-CC 'Spitting Eagle.' Look up your date on PCGS CoinFacts or VAMWorld; if your coin's die markers match a listed variety, have it attributed through PCGS VarietyPlus or NGC VarietyPlus.
The original Morgan hub dies were destroyed in 1910 — nobody expected further coinage after 1904. When Congress required new Morgan dollars in 1921 to replace coins melted under the 1918 Pittman Act, the engraving department cut entirely new hubs with shallower relief. Every 1921 Morgan (P, D, and S) shows this characteristic flat, 'mushy' look in Liberty's hair detail and the eagle's feathers. It is not damage, a weak strike on your particular coin, or a defect — it is a consistent design feature of all 1921 issues.
Yes. A genuine Morgan is 26.73 g (allow ±0.1 g for wear), 38.1 mm in diameter, and non-magnetic. A jewelry scale accurate to 0.01 g ($15 at hardware stores) plus a rare earth magnet will catch the most common fakes. If the coin weighs close to 26.73 g and shows no magnetic attraction, the silver content is almost certainly genuine. The 0.77344 troy oz of pure silver in each coin makes the melt floor roughly $62 at early-2026 silver prices — no genuine Morgan should ever sell below that.
No. Cleaning permanently reduces value, typically by 30–70%. PCGS and NGC assign cleaned coins a 'Genuine — Cleaned' or Details designation, and these slabs sell at steep discounts. Toned Morgans — rainbow peripheral color, mottled gold, dark steel — are desirable to collectors and should not be disturbed. Even a light polish with a cloth creates hairlines visible under a loupe that every experienced buyer will spot. If a coin is dirty, leave it alone.
Yes. The 2021 Morgan dollars were issued under the 2020 Silver Dollar Coin Anniversary Act with a maximum mintage of 175,000 per variety at an $85 issue price. The CC and O privy marks sold out in roughly 30 minutes on May 24, 2021. Secondary-market values: MS-69 graded CC privy examples run $300–$400; MS-70 examples reach $500–$800. The coins contain 0.858 troy oz of 99.9% fine silver — more than the 0.7734 troy oz in the originals. Note that the 'CC' is a privy mark honoring the closed Carson City Mint; these coins were struck in Philadelphia.
PL (Prooflike) and DMPL (Deep Mirror Prooflike) are surface designations for business-strike Morgans with mirror-reflective fields, caused by polished or fresh dies. PCGS tests this by reflective distance: PL requires clear letter reflection from 2–4 inches; DMPL requires 6+ inches. DMPL premiums can be enormous on dates where they are scarce: the 1886-O MS-67 DMPL brought $780,000 in 2020 versus $184,000–$190,000 for a standard MS-65. The 1881-S is the exception — it is the most accessible DMPL date in the series, available in MS-65 DMPL under $1,500.
Independent numismatic reference focused exclusively on the Morgan Silver Dollar series (1878-1904 and 1921). Values verified against PCGS Price Guide, NGC Price Guide, Greysheet CPG, and recent realized prices at Heritage Auctions, Stack's Bowers, and GreatCollections. We do not buy, sell, or appraise coins ourselves — we exist as a free public reference for owners trying to determine what they have. Read our full methodology →