Peace Silver Dollar Melt Value
Minted 1921–1935 · 90% silver · 0.7734 troy oz pure silver
Current Melt Value
| Silver spot price | Unavailable |
| Silver content | 0.7734 troy oz |
| Composition | 90% silver |
| Face value | $1.00 |
| Multiplier over face | — |
Bulk Value
| Quantity | Total Silver | Melt Value |
|---|---|---|
| 1 coin | 0.773 ozt | — |
| 5 coins | 3.867 ozt | — |
| 10 coins | 7.734 ozt | — |
| 20 coins | 15.468 ozt | — |
| 50 coins | 38.670 ozt | — |
| 100 coins | 77.340 ozt | — |
Peace Silver Dollar: Silver Content & History
The Peace Dollar contains 0.7734 troy ounces of pure silver, identical to the Morgan Dollar.
The Peace Dollar was minted from 1921 to 1928 and again from 1934 to 1935. Designed by sculptor Anthony de Francisci, it was created to commemorate peace after World War I. The obverse shows a radiant Liberty, while the reverse depicts a bald eagle perched on a rock with the word PEACE below. It was the last circulating US silver dollar produced for general commerce. Key dates include the 1921 (only minted in high relief), 1928-P, and the rare 1964-D (never officially released). The Peace Dollar holds strong collector interest, particularly in higher grades.
Collector Value Note
Common Peace Dollars in circulated condition trade near melt. Key dates like 1928-P can be worth $200+ even in worn condition.
How Melt Value Is Calculated
The melt value of a Peace Silver Dollar is calculated by multiplying the pure silver content (0.7734 troy ounces) by the current silver spot price. At today's silver price of current spot per troy ounce, one Peace Silver Dollar contains significant worth of silver.
This is the intrinsic or melt value — the metal value if the coin were melted. Actual selling price depends on dealer premiums (for bullion-grade coins) or numismatic premiums (for collector-grade examples). When selling, expect to receive a percentage below spot depending on the dealer and quantity.