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2026 Quarters: All Five Designs, Mintages, and Privy Marks

The quarter in your change this summer might not have George Washington on it. For the first time since the Standing Liberty quarter ended in 1930, circulating quarters are appearing with someone else on the obverse.

The US Mint is issuing five different quarters in 2026 for the country's 250th anniversary, and each one carries its own obverse and reverse. Every design is dual-dated 1776 ~ 2026. Officially the 2026 quarters belong to the semiquincentennial program, the same umbrella that covers this year's redesigned dimes, half dollars, and gold and silver commemoratives. The quarters are the piece of that program most people will actually touch, which is why they get their own guide.

The five designs

Washington has anchored the quarter's obverse since 1932 while the reverse rotated through states, parks, and notable women. In 2026 the Mint flipped the arrangement: the subject changes on both sides, and Washington appears on just one of the five coins.

Mayflower Compact opened the series in January. Two Pilgrims on the obverse, the Mayflower under sail on the reverse, sculpted by Phebe Hemphill. It marks the 1620 shipboard agreement that gets taught as America's first written framework for self-government.

American Revolutionary War followed in late March, and it's the one coin that keeps Washington, on the obverse. The reverse shows a Continental Army soldier at Valley Forge.

Declaration of Independence is the coin driving this year's headlines. Thomas Jefferson on the obverse and the cracked Liberty Bell on the reverse. It began reaching banks on June 1, and the Mint's direct products followed two weeks later.

U.S. Constitution puts James Madison on the obverse. The reverse shows the Independence Hall steeple with its clock set to 2:50. It's expected in late August.

Gettysburg Address closes the year, expected in late October: Abraham Lincoln on the obverse, and on the reverse two clasped hands with "a new nation, conceived in liberty" in the field.

The Mint hasn't locked firm on-sale dates for the last two designs, so treat late August and late October as the window rather than a promise. A full reference table sits at the end of this post.

How the mintages actually break down

Through May the Mint had already struck 89.8 million Declaration of Independence quarters, and production pace suggests the final figure clears 200 million. The Mayflower and Revolutionary War coins are on similar circulation-scale runs. A coin with a nine-figure mintage is common now and will stay common.

The scarcity in this series lives in three specific places.

  • 250,000 Declaration quarters struck with a "July 4th" privy mark and no mint mark, released only into circulation

  • 250 numbered 2.5-ounce silver versions of that same privy design, which never touch circulation

  • The 2026 Semiquincentennial Silver Proof Set, capped at 271,520 sets (the Mint raised the limit from an original 250,520 after opening demand ran ahead of it)

Everything else, including the rolls and bags the Mint sells directly, is a circulating-quality coin from Philadelphia or Denver, the same quality as what turns up in change, not a scarcer strike. The Mint doesn't say those products share the exact working dies as coins released through the Federal Reserve, so treat "same as pocket change" as a quality claim, not a literal one.

The July 4th privy quarters

The privy coin is a Declaration quarter with a small "July 4th" mark in the field left of Jefferson and a blank spot where the P or D mint mark would be. The Mint randomly mixed all 250,000 in with other Declaration quarters and made them available to banks and financial institutions nationwide in time for July 4, rather than selling them, so the only way to get one at face value is to find it. If the projected Declaration mintage holds, fewer than one in 800 of them carries the mark. We published a separate guide to spotting a July 4th quarter in your change when the coins dropped, and it covers the diagnostics in detail.

On July 4th itself, the Philadelphia Mint also struck 250 Declaration quarters in 2.5 ounces of .999 fine silver, each carrying the same July 4th privy mark and no mint mark, with a plain edge individually numbered 1 through 250. One silver strike for every thousand circulating privy coins. The Mint says they'll be sold at auction rather than through its catalog, on a date it hasn't announced. Edge-numbered coins are close to unprecedented for the US Mint, and how that auction gets structured will tell us a lot about how it plans to handle low-mintage releases from here.

Rolls, bags, and what they trade at now

The Mint's direct products for the Declaration quarter went on sale June 16: a two-roll set of 80 coins at $56 and a 100-coin bag at $63. Both sold out in roughly fifteen minutes.

Sellouts push demand onto the secondary market, and the repricing has been fast. On Pure, 75 of the 2026 P and D two-roll sets have sold so far, and as of July 10 the lowest ask sits at $150 against that $56 issue price. Whether that level holds once the Constitution and Gettysburg coins arrive and attention moves on is the open question; early-window pricing on Mint sellouts has a history of settling. We wrote up how sold-out Mint products behave on the secondary market using this year's proof set as the worked example.

A quarter you pull from a bank roll costs a quarter. That math is hard to beat, and it's half the fun of a circulation-only release.

Where the quarters fit in the wider 2026 program

The Liberty Bell reverse on the Declaration quarter is the same motif the Mint used on this year's Freedom Ringing gold and silver coins, which are struck in precious metal and priced accordingly. The Morgan and Peace dollars, American Eagles, and the rest of the year's numismatic lineup carry the 1776 ~ 2026 dual date and their own privy marks. The complete semiquincentennial guide maps the full program with release dates.

2026 quarter reference table

Design

Obverse

Reverse

Release

Mayflower Compact

Two Pilgrims

Mayflower at sea

January 5, 2026

American Revolutionary War

George Washington

Soldier at Valley Forge

March 23, 2026

Declaration of Independence

Thomas Jefferson

Liberty Bell

In circulation June 1; rolls and bags June 16, 2026

U.S. Constitution

James Madison

Independence Hall steeple

Expected late August 2026

Gettysburg Address

Abraham Lincoln

Clasped hands

Expected late October 2026

Frequently asked questions

Are 2026 quarters silver?

The ones in circulation are standard copper-nickel clad, whatever the design. Silver exists in exactly two forms this year: the Semiquincentennial Silver Proof Set, capped at 271,520 sets, and the 250 numbered 2.5-ounce July 4th strikes headed to auction.

What does 1776 ~ 2026 on a quarter mean?

It's a dual date marking 250 years since the Declaration of Independence, and it appears on every 2026 circulating coin, not only the quarters. A dual-dated quarter isn't automatically special; hundreds of millions carry it.

Which 2026 quarter has the lowest mintage?

Among coins you can actually find, the July 4th privy Declaration quarter, at 250,000 against standard runs in the hundreds of millions. The 250 silver versions sit below that but will only ever be available through the Mint's auction and whatever happens after it.

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Looking for a specific piece of the 2026 program? Certified semiquincentennial coins and Mint products trade on the Collect Pure marketplace with live bids and asks.