The US dollar coin has no single answer — 13 distinct types have been issued over 230 years. The active circulating dollar in 2026 shows Sacagawea on the obverse and Polly Cooper of the Oneida tribe on the reverse. Presidential, Innovation, Morgan, Peace, and Eisenhower dollars each depict someone different.
The dollar coin has 13 distinct types; the active 2026 circulating dollar features Sacagawea (obverse, since 2000) and Polly Cooper of the Oneida tribe carrying corn to Valley Forge on the reverse — but Morgan, Peace, Eisenhower, Presidential, and Innovation dollars each show different subjects.
Start with size: small gold-colored coins (26.5 mm, 8.1 g) are Susan B. Anthony (silver-colored, 1979–1981/1999), Sacagawea / Native American (gold-colored, 2000–present), Presidential (gold-colored, 2007–2016), or American Innovation (gold-colored, 2018–2032) dollars. Large silver-colored coins (38.1 mm, ~26.7 g) are Morgan, Peace, Seated Liberty, Trade, Gobrecht, Draped Bust, or Flowing Hair dollars. The Eisenhower dollar is also 38.1 mm but lighter at 22.68 g (clad). Once size and color narrow the field, check the portrait and reverse inscription to confirm the exact type.
The active circulating dollar coin in 2026 is the Sacagawea / Native American Dollar. Sacagawea was a Lemhi Shoshone woman born around 1788 who served as an interpreter and guide for the Lewis and Clark Expedition from 1804 to 1806. She traveled with the Corps of Discovery from the Mandan villages of present-day North Dakota to the Pacific Coast and back, carrying her infant son Jean Baptiste Charbonneau throughout the journey. Her presence on the expedition helped signal peaceful intentions to Native tribes the Corps encountered. The 2026 reverse depicts Polly Cooper, an Oneida woman who carried corn from Oneida country to Valley Forge during the winter of 1777–1778 to feed George Washington's starving Continental Army.
The Sacagawea dollar obverse was designed by sculptor Glenna Goodacre. The model for the portrait was Randy'L He-dow Teton, a Shoshone-Bannock-Cree college student selected from a nationwide search. The original soaring eagle reverse (2000–2008) was designed by Thomas D. Rogers Sr. Beginning in 2009, the reverse changes annually under the Native American Dollar program, with each year's design honoring a specific contribution of Native Americans. The 2026 reverse designer attribution for the Polly Cooper design was pending public confirmation as of the last review date.
Congress authorized the Sacagawea dollar under the United States Dollar Coin Act of 1997 to replace the failed Susan B. Anthony dollar, which had been rejected by the public largely because its silver color caused confusion with the quarter. The Sacagawea dollar launched in January 2000 with a distinctive gold-colored manganese brass alloy — 88.5% copper, 6% zinc, 3.5% manganese, and 2% nickel — designed to be visually distinct from all other circulating coins. In 2009, the Native American Dollar program began rotating the reverse annually to honor Native American contributions to US history and culture.
Sacagawea was born around 1788 into the Lemhi Shoshone tribe in the region of present-day Idaho. Around 1800, when she was approximately twelve years old, she was captured by a Hidatsa raiding party and taken to their villages near the mouth of the Knife River in present-day North Dakota. She was later acquired — through purchase or gambling — by French-Canadian fur trader Toussaint Charbonneau, whom she married. By the time Meriwether Lewis and William Clark arrived at the Mandan villages in the fall of 1804 to winter over, Sacagawea was pregnant with her first child.
Lewis and Clark hired Charbonneau as an interpreter for their westward journey, with the explicit understanding that Sacagawea would accompany the expedition. Her ability to communicate in Shoshone was essential: the Corps needed horses from the Shoshone to cross the Rocky Mountains, and a female interpreter was indispensable for that negotiation. On February 11, 1805, Sacagawea gave birth to Jean Baptiste Charbonneau — called 'Pomp' by Clark — and carried him on her back throughout the entire expedition.
Sacagawea's contributions to the Lewis and Clark Expedition extended beyond translation. She identified edible plants and roots, helped recover supplies when a pirogue capsized on the Missouri River in May 1805, and served as a living symbol of peaceful intent to tribes the Corps encountered along the route. Clark later wrote that her presence 'reconsiles all the Indians, as to our friendly intentions.' In a remarkable coincidence, the Shoshone chief from whom the Corps obtained horses turned out to be Sacagawea's own brother, Cameahwait.
The exact date and circumstances of Sacagawea's death remain disputed. One account, based on a journal entry by fur trader John Luttig, records that a 'Snake squaw' died at Fort Manuel in present-day South Dakota on December 20, 1812 — widely interpreted to refer to Sacagawea. A competing oral tradition among the Shoshone holds that she lived until approximately 1884 and died on the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming. Historians have not reached consensus. Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, her son, was educated in Europe under Clark's patronage and later became a fur trapper and guide; he died in 1866.
Sacagawea became a prominent figure in American commemorative culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Statues were erected in her honor across the western United States, and she was celebrated as a symbol of female exploration and Native American contribution. The selection of Sacagawea for the dollar coin in 2000 was the result of a national competition; her image replaced Susan B. Anthony, whose silver-colored coin had failed in circulation. The 2026 Native American Dollar reverse carries forward the program's mission by honoring Polly Cooper of the Oneida tribe, whose corn-carrying journey to Valley Forge in 1777–1778 is depicted on the coin's reverse.
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| c. 1788 | Sacagawea born into the Lemhi Shoshone tribe |
| c. 1800 | Captured by Hidatsa raiders; later acquired by Toussaint Charbonneau |
| 1804–1806 | Served as interpreter and guide for the Lewis and Clark Expedition |
| 1805 | Gave birth to Jean Baptiste Charbonneau at Fort Mandan on February 11 |
| 2000 | Sacagawea dollar launched; obverse by sculptor Glenna Goodacre |
| 2009 | Native American Dollar reverse program began annual rotation |
The US dollar coin has changed design more than any other denomination. Thirteen distinct types span 230 years, with shifts driven by artistic taste, economic policy, silver coinage acts, WWII metal conservation, failed circulation experiments, and commemorative legislation.
| Design | Years | Obverse | Reverse | Key change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flowing Hair Dollar | 1794–1795 | Flowing Hair Liberty Robert Scot |
Small heraldic eagle Robert Scot |
The first US dollar coin ever struck; only 1,758 minted in 1794. Varieties: 1794 (unique high-relief strike — one example sold for $10,016,875 in 2013) |
| Draped Bust Dollar | 1795–1804 | Draped Bust Liberty Robert Scot (after Gilbert Stuart drawings) |
Small eagle (1795–1798); heraldic eagle with shield (1798–1804) Robert Scot |
Reverse switched from small eagle to heraldic eagle in 1798; the 1804 dollar is actually a restrike produced 1834–1860. Varieties: 1804 'King of American Coins' (15 known; auction record $7,680,000 in 2020) |
| Gobrecht Dollar | 1836–1839 | Seated Liberty Christian Gobrecht |
Flying eagle Christian Gobrecht |
Transitional proof and pattern series; flying eagle reverse distinguishes it from later Seated Liberty dollar. Varieties: Multiple sub-types based on die orientation and eagle position |
| Seated Liberty Dollar | 1840–1873 | Seated Liberty Christian Gobrecht |
Heraldic eagle Robert Ball Hughes (reverse adaptation) |
Flying eagle replaced by heraldic eagle; series ended by the Coinage Act of 1873. Varieties: 1851-O, 1870-S (unique — only one example known) |
| Trade Dollar | 1873–1885 | Seated Liberty (modified pose) William Barber |
Heraldic eagle with 'TRADE DOLLAR' and '420 GRAINS, 900 FINE' inscription William Barber |
Heavier than standard at 27.22 g (420 grains) to compete with the Mexican silver dollar in East Asian trade; demonetized 1876, relegalized 1965. Varieties: 1878-CC, 1884 and 1885 (proof-only, extremely rare) |
| Morgan Silver Dollar | 1878–1904, 1921, 2021–present | Liberty (modeled by Anna Willess Williams) George T. Morgan |
Heraldic eagle clutching arrows and olive branch George T. Morgan |
Authorized by the Bland-Allison Act of 1878; production halted 1904; resumed 1921 under the Pittman Act; modern .999 fine revival authorized by Public Law 116-286 (2021). Varieties: 1893-S (series key, 100,000 struck), 1895 Proof-only (880 struck — 'King of Morgans'), 1889-CC, 1921 Wide-Reed (157 reeds vs standard 189) |
| Peace Dollar | 1921–1935, 2021–present | Liberty wearing radiate crown (modeled by Teresa de Francisci) Anthony de Francisci |
Eagle perched on rock holding olive branch; 'PEACE' inscribed below Anthony de Francisci |
Replaced the Morgan dollar in late 1921; commemorated WWI's end; modern .999 fine revival alongside Morgan revival under Public Law 116-286 (2021). Varieties: 1921 (high relief, only year), 1928 (360,649 — lowest mintage), 1964-D (struck but all melted; none confirmed outside Mint) |
| Eisenhower Dollar | 1971–1978 | Dwight D. Eisenhower Frank Gasparro |
Eagle landing on the Moon (1971–1974, 1977–1978); Liberty Bell over Moon (Bicentennial, 1975–1976) Frank Gasparro |
First large-diameter dollar since 1935; clad composition (copper-nickel) for circulation; 40% silver for collector versions; last large-format US dollar before the small-dollar program. Varieties: 1972 Type 2 (three types by earth graphic detail), 1976-S silver proof |
| Susan B. Anthony Dollar | 1979–1981, 1999 | Susan B. Anthony Frank Gasparro |
Eagle landing on the Moon (scaled-down Eisenhower reverse) Frank Gasparro |
First small-format US dollar (26.5 mm); copper-nickel clad; failed in circulation due to confusion with the quarter; 1999 reissue bridged gap before Sacagawea launch. Varieties: 1979-P Wide Rim ('Near Date'), 1981-S Type 2 proof (clearer S mintmark) |
| Sacagawea / Native American Dollar | 2000–present | Sacagawea with infant Jean Baptiste Charbonneau Glenna Goodacre (model: Randy'L He-dow Teton) |
Soaring eagle (2000–2008); annual Native American theme (2009–present); 2026: Polly Cooper / Oneida at Valley Forge Thomas D. Rogers Sr. (2000–2008 soaring eagle); varies annually (2009–present) |
Manganese brass alloy gives distinctive gold color; annual reverse rotation under Native American Dollar program began 2009; authorized under United States Dollar Coin Act of 1997. Varieties: 2000-P Cheerios Dollar (enhanced tail feathers — early-release promotional variety), 2000-P Wounded Eagle |
| Presidential Dollar | 2007–2016, 2020 | US presidents in chronological order of service (39 presidents across 40 coins; Cleveland twice for non-consecutive terms) Various (one per president) |
Statue of Liberty (uniform across all Presidential Dollars) Don Everhart |
Four obverse designs per year; program ran 2007–2016 covering Washington through Reagan; George H.W. Bush added posthumously in 2020; requires president to be deceased. Varieties: 2007-P Washington and 2007-P Adams 'plain edge' errors (missing edge lettering) |
| American Innovation Dollar | 2018–2032 | Statue of Liberty (uniform across all Innovation Dollars) Justin Kunz |
State-specific innovation (56 coins total — 50 states, DC, 5 territories) Varies by coin |
14-year program; Statue of Liberty obverse uniform; reverse celebrates one innovation per jurisdiction; 2026 California coin honors Steve Jobs / Apple. Varieties: 2018 introductory coin (generic American innovation theme) |
| Modern Morgan and Peace Dollar Revival | 2021–present | Morgan: Liberty (George T. Morgan original); Peace: Liberty with radiate crown (Anthony de Francisci original) George T. Morgan (Morgan); Anthony de Francisci (Peace) |
Morgan: heraldic eagle; Peace: eagle on rock with 'PEACE' George T. Morgan (Morgan); Anthony de Francisci (Peace) |
Numismatic / bullion program only — not circulating; .999 fine silver (0.858 troy oz ASW); privy marks CC and O struck at Philadelphia to honor closed mints; no coins in 2022 due to silver-blank shortage. Varieties: 2021-D Morgan (175,000 mintage — lowest of the modern series), 2021-CC and 2021-O privy mark versions |
Mint marks on dollar coins follow the general US Mint placement conventions but vary by type and era. On vintage Morgan dollars (1878–1921), the mint mark appears on the reverse centered below the eagle's tail feathers, above the letters 'D' and 'O' of 'DOLLAR.' The five mints that struck Morgan dollars were Philadelphia (no mark), New Orleans (O), San Francisco (S), Carson City (CC), and Denver (D). On Peace dollars (1921–1935), the mint mark moves to the reverse below the eagle, to the left of the 'ONE DOLLAR' inscription. On Eisenhower dollars, the mint mark is on the obverse above the date.
The small-format dollar program introduced a structural change: Sacagawea, Presidential, and Innovation dollars carry the date and mint mark on the coin's edge — not the face — alongside the national motto 'E PLURIBUS UNUM' and 'IN GOD WE TRUST.' This edge-lettering convention was applied to all Presidential Dollars beginning 2007, leading to one of the program's most famous error varieties: 2007-P Washington and Adams dollars struck without edge lettering, known as 'Godless dollars,' which traded at strong premiums among collectors.
The modern Morgan and Peace revival (2021–present) uses a distinct mint mark scheme. Coins struck at Philadelphia carry the 'P' mark; San Francisco coins carry 'S' for Proof and Reverse Proof; Denver struck the 2021-D (the only Denver modern Morgan, at 175,000). Unusually, Carson City (CC) and New Orleans (O) privy marks appear on 2021 coins despite both mints having been closed for decades — these are Philadelphia strikes bearing the privy mark as a tribute. The 2022 production gap (no coins struck) resulted from a silver-blank shortage.
| Period | Location | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| 1878–1921 (Morgan) | Philadelphia (P/no mark), New Orleans (O), San Francisco (S), Carson City (CC), Denver (D) | Bland-Allison Act (1878) mandated large silver-dollar production at multiple mints to absorb western silver; Carson City added to handle Nevada silver; Denver joined in 1921 under Pittman Act recoinage |
| 1921–1935 (Peace) | Philadelphia, San Francisco, Denver; Carson City not used | Peace dollar succeeded the Morgan; Carson City Mint had closed for dollar coinage; New Orleans Mint closed 1909 |
| 1971–1978 (Eisenhower) | Philadelphia (no mark on clad), Denver (D), San Francisco (S — collector 40% silver versions only) | Clad dollars for circulation struck at Philadelphia and Denver; silver collector versions restricted to San Francisco |
| 1979–1999 (Susan B. Anthony) | Philadelphia (P), Denver (D), San Francisco (S — proof only) | Standard three-mint arrangement; SBA was the first circulating US coin to carry the 'P' Philadelphia mint mark |
| 2000–present (Sacagawea / Native American, Presidential, Innovation) | Philadelphia (P), Denver (D), San Francisco (S — proof only) | Edge lettering carries mint mark since 2007 Presidential program; circulation coins struck at Philadelphia and Denver |
| 2021–present (Modern Morgan and Peace revival) | Philadelphia (P, plus CC and O privy marks as tribute); San Francisco (S — Proof, Reverse Proof); Denver (D — 2021-D only) | Numismatic program under Public Law 116-286; privy marks honor closed mints; 2022 gap due to silver-blank shortage |
The US Mint has issued 13 distinct dollar coin types since 1794. The question 'who is on the dollar coin' has a different answer depending on which coin is in your hand — a Morgan dollar shows George T. Morgan's Liberty; a Presidential dollar shows one of 39 different presidents; a Sacagawea dollar shows the Lemhi Shoshone interpreter with her infant son. The fastest diagnostic is size: large (38.1 mm) versus small (26.5 mm), then color (silver versus gold), then portrait.
Hold the coin and measure or estimate the diameter. A small coin (26.5 mm, about the size of a quarter) that is silver-colored is a Susan B. Anthony dollar (1979–1981 or 1999). A small coin that is gold-colored is either a Sacagawea / Native American dollar (Sacagawea with infant on obverse), a Presidential dollar (a specific president on obverse), or an American Innovation dollar (Statue of Liberty on obverse). A large coin (38.1 mm) lighter than expected (22.68 g) is an Eisenhower. A large coin weighing roughly 26.7 g is a silver dollar — check the date and reverse inscription to distinguish Morgan, Peace, Seated Liberty, Trade, Gobrecht, Draped Bust, or Flowing Hair types.
| Type | Years | Obverse | Size | How to tell |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flowing Hair Dollar | 1794–1795 | Flowing Hair Liberty facing right Robert Scot |
39–40 mm (large silver); 26.96 g | The first US dollar ever struck — rough strike, flowing Liberty hair, small heraldic eagle reverse; only 1,758 struck in 1794. |
| Draped Bust Dollar | 1795–1804 | Draped Bust Liberty facing right Robert Scot (after Gilbert Stuart drawings) |
39–40 mm (large silver); 26.96 g | Draped female bust on obverse; later years have heraldic eagle with shield reverse; the 1804 'King of American Coins' is a restrike — only 15 known. |
| Gobrecht Dollar | 1836–1839 | Seated Liberty (designed by Christian Gobrecht) Christian Gobrecht |
39 mm (large silver); 26.73 g | Transitional series; the distinctive flying eagle reverse (not the heraldic eagle of the Seated Liberty dollar) identifies a Gobrecht. |
| Seated Liberty Dollar | 1840–1873 | Seated Liberty Christian Gobrecht (obverse) |
38.1 mm (large silver); 26.73 g | Seated Liberty obverse with heraldic eagle reverse (not flying eagle); series ended with the Coinage Act of 1873. |
| Trade Dollar | 1873–1885 | Seated Liberty (modified pose) William Barber |
38.1 mm (large silver); 27.22 g — heavier than other 38.1 mm silver dollars | Reverse reads 'TRADE DOLLAR' and '420 GRAINS, 900 FINE' — unique inscription not found on any other US dollar; weight 27.22 g vs 26.73 g standard. |
| Morgan Silver Dollar | 1878–1904, 1921, 2021–present | Liberty (modeled by Anna Willess Williams of Philadelphia) George T. Morgan |
38.1 mm (large silver); 26.73 g vintage / 26.69 g modern (.999 fine) | Liberty with hair and curls; heraldic eagle clutching arrows and olive branch on reverse; 'M' signature below the ribbon on obverse and on the eagle's tail feathers. |
| Peace Dollar | 1921–1935, 2021–present | Liberty wearing radiate crown (modeled by Teresa de Francisci) Anthony de Francisci |
38.1 mm (large silver); 26.73 g vintage / 26.69 g modern (.999 fine) | Radiate-crown Liberty obverse; 'PEACE' inscribed below the eagle on a rock on the reverse — the word PEACE is the fastest identifier. |
| Eisenhower Dollar | 1971–1978 | Dwight D. Eisenhower (President 1953–1961) Frank Gasparro |
38.1 mm (large clad); 22.68 g clad / 24.59 g 40% silver collector versions | Large 38.1 mm coin but lighter than silver dollars (22.68 g clad); Eisenhower portrait is unmistakable; reverse shows eagle landing on the Moon or Bicentennial Liberty Bell. |
| Susan B. Anthony Dollar | 1979–1981, 1999 | Susan B. Anthony (suffragist, 1820–1906) Frank Gasparro |
26.5 mm (small); 8.1 g; copper-nickel clad (silver-colored) | Small (26.5 mm), silver-colored — the only small silver-colored US dollar coin; frequently confused with the quarter due to similar size and color. |
| Sacagawea / Native American Dollar | 2000–present | Sacagawea (Lemhi Shoshone) with infant son Jean Baptiste Charbonneau; modeled by Randy'L He-dow Teton Glenna Goodacre (obverse); reverse changes annually since 2009 |
26.5 mm (small); 8.1 g; manganese brass (gold-colored) | Small (26.5 mm), gold-colored, Sacagawea with infant on obverse; reverse varies by year — 2026 reverse depicts Polly Cooper of the Oneida tribe at Valley Forge. |
| Presidential Dollar | 2007–2016, 2020 | Various US presidents (39 presidents across 40 coins; Cleveland appears twice for non-consecutive terms) Various (one obverse designer per president; Don Everhart designed the uniform Statue of Liberty reverse) |
26.5 mm (small); 8.1 g; manganese brass (gold-colored) | Small (26.5 mm), gold-colored, presidential portrait on obverse with years of service inscribed; Statue of Liberty on reverse — same reverse on all Presidential Dollars. |
| American Innovation Dollar | 2018–2032 | Statue of Liberty (designed by Justin Kunz; uniform across all Innovation Dollars) Justin Kunz (obverse); reverse designers vary by state/territory |
26.5 mm (small); 8.1 g; manganese brass (gold-colored) | Small (26.5 mm), gold-colored, Statue of Liberty on obverse (same on all); reverse shows a state-specific innovation — 56 coins total across 14 years. |
| Modern Morgan and Peace Dollar Revival | 2021–present | Morgan: Liberty (same as vintage George T. Morgan design); Peace: Liberty wearing radiate crown (same as vintage Anthony de Francisci design) George T. Morgan (Morgan revival); Anthony de Francisci (Peace revival) — original dies adapted for modern striking |
38.1 mm (large); 26.69 g; .999 fine silver (0.858 troy oz ASW) — not the vintage 90/10 alloy | Visually identical to vintage Morgan and Peace; distinguishable by weight (26.69 g vs vintage 26.73 g), silver purity (.999 vs 90/10), and mint marks including CC and O privy marks struck at Philadelphia. |
The answer depends on which dollar coin. The active 2026 circulating dollar is the Native American Dollar, with Sacagawea (Lemhi Shoshone interpreter for Lewis and Clark) on the obverse and Polly Cooper of the Oneida tribe on the reverse. Other dollar coins show different subjects: Morgan dollars show George T. Morgan's Liberty; Presidential dollars show one of 39 different presidents; Eisenhower dollars show President Dwight D. Eisenhower. There are 13 distinct US dollar coin types total, each with a different portrait.
The US Mint has issued 13 distinct types of dollar coin since 1794: Flowing Hair (1794–1795), Draped Bust (1795–1804), Gobrecht (1836–1839), Seated Liberty (1840–1873), Trade Dollar (1873–1885), Morgan (1878–1904, 1921, 2021+), Peace (1921–1935, 2021+), Eisenhower (1971–1978), Susan B. Anthony (1979–1981, 1999), Sacagawea / Native American (2000+), Presidential (2007–2016, 2020), American Innovation (2018–2032), and the Modern Morgan and Peace revival (2021+).
The 2026 Sacagawea / Native American Dollar carries Sacagawea on the obverse (unchanged since 2000) and Polly Cooper of the Oneida tribe on the reverse. Cooper carried corn from Oneida country to Valley Forge, Pennsylvania during the winter of 1777–1778 to feed George Washington's starving Continental Army. The 2026 American Innovation Dollar (California) honors Steve Jobs and Apple. The 2026 American Innovation program also releases coins for Texas, Vermont, and Kentucky.
Polly Cooper was an Oneida woman who carried corn from Oneida lands in present-day upstate New York to Valley Forge, Pennsylvania during the winter of 1777–1778. Washington's Continental Army was near starvation, and the Oneida supplied aid. Cooper taught the soldiers how to prepare the corn for eating. The 2026 Native American Dollar reverse depicts her contribution, as authorized under the Native American Dollar program and framed within the 250th-anniversary Semiquincentennial program (Public Law 116-330).
US dollar coins come in two sizes. Large (38.1 mm): Flowing Hair, Draped Bust, Gobrecht, Seated Liberty, Trade Dollar, Morgan, Peace, Eisenhower, and modern Morgan and Peace revival. Small (26.5 mm): Susan B. Anthony (1979–1999), Sacagawea / Native American (2000+), Presidential (2007–2016, 2020), and American Innovation (2018–2032). The Eisenhower is large (38.1 mm) but lighter than silver dollars at 22.68 g (clad) versus 26.73 g for vintage silver types.
Both vintage Morgan and Peace dollars share the same specifications: 26.73 g, 38.1 mm, 90% silver, 0.77344 troy oz ASW. The distinction is visual. The Morgan (1878–1904, 1921) has Liberty with hair and curls on the obverse — designed by George T. Morgan using Anna Willess Williams as model — and a heraldic eagle on the reverse. The Peace (1921–1935) has Liberty wearing a radiate crown — modeled by Teresa de Francisci — and an eagle perched on a rock with 'PEACE' inscribed below.
Yes, but they contain no gold. The Sacagawea / Native American Dollar (2000+), Presidential Dollar (2007–2016, 2020), and American Innovation Dollar (2018–2032) are all made of manganese brass — 88.5% copper, 6% zinc, 3.5% manganese, and 2% nickel. The manganese alloy produces the distinctive gold color. All three types weigh 8.1 g and measure 26.5 mm. The gold color was intentionally chosen to distinguish these coins from the silver-colored Susan B. Anthony dollar that failed in circulation.
By auction record, the 1794 Flowing Hair Dollar — the very first US dollar coin struck — sold for $10,016,875 in 2013. The 1804 Draped Bust Dollar ('King of American Coins,' only 15 known, actually a restrike) sold for $7,680,000 in 2020. Among Morgan dollars, the 1893-S (100,000 struck) holds the series auction record at $2,086,875 for a PCGS MS67 CAC example (GreatCollections, August 29, 2021). The 1895 Philadelphia Proof ('King of Morgans,' 880 struck) is the only date with no confirmed business strikes.
Both are 26.5 mm and 8.1 g — the same size and weight. The single fastest visual test is color: the Susan B. Anthony dollar is silver-colored (copper-nickel clad, 1979–1981 and 1999), while the Sacagawea dollar is gold-colored (manganese brass, 2000–present). The portrait also differs: Susan B. Anthony shows the suffragist's profile with short hair; Sacagawea shows a woman with long hair and an infant on her back.
The Susan B. Anthony dollar (1979–1981) failed primarily because it was the same silver color as the quarter and close in size (26.5 mm vs 24.26 mm for the quarter), causing constant confusion. About 857 million were struck but the public rejected them, and production halted in 1981. The Sacagawea dollar (2000+) addressed the color problem with a gold-colored alloy, but Americans still preferred the dollar bill, limiting circulating use. Presidential and Innovation dollars are minted mainly for collector markets and vending applications.
Presidential Dollars are small (26.5 mm), gold-colored dollar coins issued from 2007 to 2016, with a special George H.W. Bush coin added in 2020. Each coin shows one president on the obverse — in chronological order of service — with years of service inscribed. The reverse is always the Statue of Liberty, designed by Don Everhart. The program covers 39 presidents across 40 coins (Grover Cleveland appears twice for his non-consecutive terms). By program convention, only deceased presidents may be depicted.
The modern Morgan dollar (2021+), authorized by Public Law 116-286, uses the same George T. Morgan design as the vintage coin but is struck in .999 fine silver rather than the vintage 90% silver / 10% copper alloy. The modern coin weighs 26.69 g versus the vintage 26.73 g, and contains 0.858 troy oz of silver versus 0.77344 troy oz for the vintage. Modern coins are numismatic products — not circulating coinage. Privy marks CC and O appear on some Philadelphia strikes as tributes to the closed Carson City and New Orleans mints.
The small-format circulating dollar coins — Sacagawea, Presidential, and Innovation — contain no silver; they are manganese brass (88.5% copper, 6% zinc, 3.5% manganese, 2% nickel). The modern Morgan and Peace dollar revival (2021+) is .999 fine silver and contains 0.858 troy oz of silver per coin, but these are collectible numismatic products, not circulating coins. Vintage Morgan and Peace dollars (1878–1935) are 90% silver and contain 0.77344 troy oz of silver.
The American Innovation Dollar is a 14-year program (2018–2032) issuing 56 gold-colored small dollar coins — one per state, DC, and five territories. All share a Statue of Liberty obverse designed by Justin Kunz. The reverse changes per coin to celebrate a jurisdiction-specific innovation. The 2026 California coin honors Steve Jobs and Apple. The program is authorized to run through 2032 and will cover all 50 states, DC, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the US Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
Identifying who is on a dollar coin is step one. Step two is understanding what it is worth in today's numismatic market — whether it is a common-date Sacagawea, a key-date Morgan, or a Presidential error variety. coins-value.com maintains price guides across all 13 dollar coin types.
See dollar coin prices across all 13 types →When the decision tree is not enough, the Assay coin identifier app can match your dollar coin to the correct type using your phone's camera — covering all 13 types, including the modern Morgan and Peace revival privy-mark varieties.
This page is an informational reference for the portraits and history of US dollar coins; for current numismatic values across all 13 types, see coins-value.com.