2022 American Women Quarter Value Guide

What is your 2022 American Women Quarter worth? Complete price guide covering all five designs — Maya Angelou, Sally Ride, Wilma Mankiller, Nina Otero-Warren, Anna May Wong — by mint mark (P, D, S), grade, and finish. Values updated January 2026.

Quick Answer

Most 2022 quarters in pocket change are worth $0.25 (face value). An S-mint business strike (NIFC) is worth $3.00–$18.00+, and a 2022 silver proof contains 0.2039 troy oz of silver — worth ~$24.30+ at January 2026 spot prices.

  • Circulated (P or D mint): Face value ($0.25)
  • Uncirculated P/D (BU, MS63–65): $1.00–$2.00
  • High-Grade P/D (MS66): $4.00–$9.00 depending on design
  • S-Mint Business Strike (NIFC, any design): $3.00–$18.00+ depending on design and grade
  • S-Mint Clad Proof: $4.00–$8.00
  • S-Mint Silver Proof (melt floor): ~$24.30+ at current silver prices
  • Trophy-Grade MS68/MS69: $1,500–$2,500 (rare, registry-driven)

Value depends on mint mark, finish, design, and grade. An S-mint coin with a shiny but non-mirrored finish is a scarce NIFC issue worth keeping. See the full value chart →

The 2022 American Women Quarters™ Program launched five commemorative quarter designs celebrating trailblazing American women — the inaugural year of a four-year series authorized under the Circulating Collectible Coin Redesign Act of 2020. Crucially, 2022 also introduced the first new Washington quarter obverse in 90 years: the Laura Gardin Fraser "Type 2" portrait, replacing the long-running John Flanagan design used since 1932. For the full series context and multi-year price history, see our American Women Quarter Value Guide.

2022 American Women Quarter obverse showing the Laura Gardin Fraser Type 2 portrait of George Washington facing right with deeply textured hair

The 2022 Washington Quarter obverse features the new Laura Gardin Fraser "Type 2" portrait — the first design change to the Washington quarter in 90 years.

For mint errors on 2022 quarters — including the "Ghost Comet" Sally Ride die clash and "Drooling George" die breaks — see our 2022 Quarter Errors Guide.

2022 Quarter Composition & Melt Value

2022 American Women Quarter Specifications — Clad (P, D, S-Business, S-Clad Proof)
Composition: 91.67% Cu, 8.33% Ni (cupronickel clad copper) | Weight: 5.670 g | Diameter: 24.26 mm | Edge: Reeded (119 reeds)
2022 American Women Quarter Specifications — Silver Proof Only
Composition: 99.9% Fine Silver | Weight: 6.343 g | Silver Content: 0.2039 Troy Oz per coin | Diameter: 24.26 mm | Edge: Reeded

Clad Composition (P, D, S-Business, S-Clad Proof)

The vast majority of 2022 quarters use the standard cupronickel clad copper alloy introduced in 1965 — two outer layers of 75% copper and 25% nickel bonded to a pure copper core. The exposed copper core is visible as a reddish-brown stripe on the coin's edge. The melt value of a clad quarter is negligible, typically between $0.04 and $0.06, so there is no meaningful melt floor for these issues. A heavily circulated clad quarter reverts to its legal tender face value of $0.25.

Silver Proof Composition (S-Silver Proof Only)

The San Francisco Silver Proof quarters are struck in 99.9% fine silver — an upgrade from the traditional 90% "coin silver" standard used prior to 2019. Each coin weighs 6.343 grams and contains 0.2039 Troy Ounces of silver. The easiest identification test is the edge: a silver proof shows a uniformly brilliant silver edge with no copper stripe; a clad coin reveals a reddish-copper center stripe.

Edge comparison between a 2022 silver proof quarter showing a solid silver edge and a 2022 clad quarter showing a copper center stripe

Edge comparison: the silver proof quarter (left) shows a uniform brilliant silver edge; the clad quarter (right) reveals a copper-colored center stripe.

The 2026 Silver Melt Floor

As of January 29, 2026, silver spot prices reached approximately $119.18 per troy ounce, per APMEX silver spot data. This creates a hard melt floor for 2022 Silver Proof quarters: 0.2039 troy oz × $119.18 ≈ $24.30 per coin. A complete five-coin 2022 Silver Proof Set contains approximately 1.02 Troy Ounces of silver, placing its melt value at approximately $121.50 — well above the original U.S. Mint issue price of roughly $73.00. Because melt value now exceeds many numismatic premiums, be cautious of under-melt offers, which may indicate counterfeit clad coins plated to appear silver. Edge inspection is the first and most accessible test. See Coin World's coverage of 2022 Silver Proof production for additional context.

⚠️ Never Clean Silver Proofs

With silver at historic highs, some sellers chemically "dip" tarnished silver proofs to make them appear new. PCGS and NGC label cleaned coins "Improperly Cleaned," destroying all numismatic premium above melt value. Do not clean your coins — not even with a soft cloth, which leaves hairlines that instantly downgrade a coin.

2022 Quarter Value Chart by Design, Mint & Grade

The 2022 American Women Quarter program produced five distinct reverse designs, each with its own grading challenges and demand curve. Values are organized per design with all documented mint and finish combinations. Values as of January 2026. Mintage data sourced from CoinMintages.com.

ℹ️ Grade Definitions Used in These Tables

Circulated: AU58 and below — visible wear on high points. BU (MS63–65): Brilliant Uncirculated with typical bag/roll contact marks — nice but not perfect. High-Grade (MS66): The "break-even" threshold where collector premium begins. MS67/68: The exponential profit zone, driven by Registry Set competition.

All five 2022 American Women Quarter reverse designs arranged side by side: Maya Angelou, Dr. Sally Ride, Wilma Mankiller, Nina Otero-Warren, and Anna May Wong

All five 2022 American Women Quarter reverse designs (left to right): Maya Angelou, Dr. Sally Ride, Wilma Mankiller, Nina Otero-Warren, Anna May Wong. (Illustration — not photos of your exact coins)

Maya Angelou Quarter Value (Design 1 — Released January 3, 2022)

The large, open sky fields behind Angelou on the reverse are the primary grading challenge — contact marks are highly visible against the smooth background, making the MS66+ grade significantly harder to achieve than on other 2022 designs. This condition rarity steepens the value curve at the high end. The PCGS CoinFacts entry for the 2022-P Maya Angelou reflects this population dynamic. The S-mint NIFC Maya Angelou commands the highest MS66 premium among all five 2022 designs.

MintFinishCirculatedBU (MS63–65)High-Grade (MS66)Clad ProofSilver ProofNotes
PBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$5.00–$8.00Common in circulation; sky fields are the grade-killer
DBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$5.00–$8.00Typically sharper strikes than P due to lower die fatigue
SBusiness (NIFC)N/A$3.00–$6.00$12.00–$18.00~300,000 minted; never circulated; shiny but not mirrored finish
SClad Proof$4.00–$8.00PR69 DCAM is standard; copper edge stripe visible
SSilver Proof~$24.30+Melt floor ~$24.30 at $119/oz silver; solid silver edge
Side-by-side grade comparison of a circulated 2022 American Women Quarter obverse versus a high-grade MS66 example showing luster and surface differences

Grade comparison for the 2022 American Women Quarter obverse: a circulated example (left) vs. a high-grade MS66 (right). Note the loss of luster on the cheekbone and hair above the ear — the primary grading focal points on the Fraser portrait. (Illustration — not photos of your exact coins)

Dr. Sally Ride Quarter Value (Design 2 — Released March 22, 2022)

The complex detailing of Earth and the space shuttle window provides natural camouflage for minor contact marks, making MS66 and MS67 examples statistically more attainable on this design than on the Angelou. High-grade premiums are consequently slightly lower. See APMEX values for the 2022-P Dr. Sally Ride quarter for current market context.

MintFinishCirculatedBU (MS63–65)High-Grade (MS66)Clad ProofSilver ProofNotes
PBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$4.00–$7.00Complex reverse aids mark camouflage; lower MS66 premium than Angelou
DBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$4.00–$7.00Earth/window detail provides grade camouflage
SBusiness (NIFC)N/A$3.00–$6.00$10.00–$15.00~300,000 minted; NIFC; cartwheel luster distinguishes from proof
SClad Proof$4.00–$8.00PR69 DCAM is standard
SSilver Proof~$24.30+Melt floor ~$24.30 at $119/oz silver

Wilma Mankiller Quarter Value (Design 3 — Released June 7, 2022)

The shawl worn by Mankiller is the critical grading focal point for this design — the textured fabric is the first area to show friction in circulated examples and the first to accumulate bag scuffing in uncirculated coins. A pristine shawl surface is the defining diagnostic for an MS66+ specimen. See the PCGS CoinFacts page for the 2022-S Wilma Mankiller and the NGC Coin Explorer for the 2022-P Wilma Mankiller.

MintFinishCirculatedBU (MS63–65)High-Grade (MS66)Clad ProofSilver ProofNotes
PBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$5.00–$8.00Shawl surface is primary grade-killer
DBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$5.00–$8.00D MS68 documented at ~$1,500; low grade survival on shawl
SBusiness (NIFC)N/A$3.00–$6.00$10.00–$15.00~300,000 minted; NIFC; shiny but not mirrored
SClad Proof$4.00–$8.00PR69 DCAM is standard
SSilver Proof~$24.30+Melt floor ~$24.30 at $119/oz silver

Nina Otero-Warren Quarter Value (Design 4 — Released August 15, 2022)

The yucca flowers flanking the portrait act as a protective architectural rim for the central devices, often helping to preserve facial detail better than on other 2022 designs. However, the open fields to the left and right of the portrait remain primary contact-mark vulnerability zones. See the PCGS CoinFacts page for the 2022-P Nina Otero-Warren and the NGC Coin Explorer for the 2022-P Nina Otero-Warren.

MintFinishCirculatedBU (MS63–65)High-Grade (MS66)Clad ProofSilver ProofNotes
PBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$5.00–$8.00Open fields left/right of portrait are mark zones
DBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$5.00–$8.00Floral detail aids grade survival on reverse
SBusiness (NIFC)N/A$3.00–$6.00$10.00–$15.00~300,000 minted; NIFC; sold in rolls/bags only
SClad Proof$4.00–$8.00PR69 DCAM is standard
SSilver Proof~$24.30+Melt floor ~$24.30 at $119/oz silver

Anna May Wong Quarter Value (Design 5 — Released October 24, 2022)

This design presents two distinct grading challenges: the "Marquee Lights" border dots often display metal flow lines ("finning") that can resemble damage under casual inspection, and the large, smooth plane of Wong's hand is the primary contact-mark zone. A "clean hand" is the definitive diagnostic for an MS67 grade. The D-mint Anna May Wong holds the top documented auction realization among all 2022 business strikes. See the PCGS CoinFacts page for the 2022-D Anna May Wong and the GreatCollections auction archive for the 2022-S Anna May Wong Proof.

MintFinishCirculatedBU (MS63–65)High-Grade (MS66)Clad ProofSilver ProofNotes
PBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$5.00–$9.00Hand surface is primary grade-killer; check Marquee Lights for finning
DBusiness$0.25$1.00–$2.00$5.00–$9.00D MS69 documented at $362–$2,500; highest business-strike record of 2022
SBusiness (NIFC)N/A$3.00–$6.00$10.00–$15.00~300,000 minted; NIFC; cartwheel luster, not mirror-like
SClad Proof$4.00–$8.00PR69 DCAM is standard
SSilver Proof~$24.30+Melt floor ~$24.30 at $119/oz silver

💡 The Value Cliff: Know Before You Submit

For MS60–MS65 examples, the cost of professional grading ($30+) exceeds the coin's value — do not submit these grades to PCGS or NGC. MS66 is the break-even point. The jump from MS67 to MS68 can represent a $20–$300 increase driven entirely by Registry Set competition. S-mint NIFC coins warrant submission at lower grades due to their inherent scarcity premium.

Values represent typical market prices as of January 2026. For the full series price history, see our American Women Quarter Value Guide. Mintage data via CoinMintages.com.

Most Valuable 2022 Quarter Varieties

A. Trophy-Level High-Grade Examples

In the modern certified-coin era, the price difference between MS67 and MS68 is exponential. "Registry Set" competition — where wealthy collectors pay record prices for the top-population specimen in a given grade — drives these results. Trophy examples are virtually never found in circulation; they must be screened from mint rolls immediately upon release.

DesignGradeWhy It Is ValuableDocumented High-End RangeSource
Anna May Wong (D)MS69Statistical anomaly — MS69 on a business strike requires flawless surfaces under 5× magnification; the smooth hand surface makes this nearly impossible$362–$2,500PCGS CoinFacts
Maya Angelou (P/D)MS68First coin in the series drove high submission rates; MS68 remains elusive due to the open sky field that magnifies contact marks~$1,500–$2,500PCGS Auction Prices
Wilma Mankiller (D)MS68Low high-grade survival rate due to the shawl texture trapping bag marks; a pristine shawl is required~$1,500 (Est.)CoinWeek
All Designs (S)PR70 DCAMSilver Proof perfection for registry sets; PR69 DCAM is the common standard; PR70 commands a premium for top-pop collectors$45–$70PCGS CoinFacts

⚠️ MS69 Price Context

The record price of approximately $2,500 for a Maya Angelou MS69 was driven by "First Strike" labels and initial-release exuberance. Once population reports stabilize, sustained MS68 pricing generally settles in the $100–$300 range. Treat MS69 sale prices as rare "jackpot" events rather than reliable benchmarks.

B. Findable Die Varieties

The following varieties result from die-level characteristics — not random damage — meaning every coin struck from the affected die will display the same feature. They are identifiable with a 10× loupe and are documented in Variety Vista's 2022-P AWQ DDR listings and Variety Vista's DDO listings.

10x magnification close-up of the Maya Angelou 2022 quarter reverse showing the Doubled Earring variety VDDR-001 with a secondary outline below the primary earring

Maya Angelou Quarter "Doubled Earring" (VDDR-001): a distinct secondary outline of the earring appears below the primary earring on the reverse. Examine under 10× magnification.

VarietyDesignHow to IdentifyPremium (Raw)
Doubled Earring (VDDR-001)Maya AngelouDistinct secondary outline of the earring visible below the primary earring on the reverse; Class VIII (tilted hub) doubling — a smear, not a shelf$20–$50
Doubled Die Obverse (DDO)Wilma MankillerDoubling visible on "LIBERTY" and "IN GOD WE TRUST" on the obverse; verified in the Wexler/VarietyVista attribution files$15–$40
"In Cod We Trust"Anna May WongThe "G" in GOD is missing or very faint on the obverse, causing the motto to read "IN COD WE TRUST"; caused by a grease-filled or polished die$5–$20 (novelty)
10x magnification close-up of the Wilma Mankiller 2022 quarter obverse showing Doubled Die Obverse doubling on LIBERTY and IN GOD WE TRUST

Wilma Mankiller Doubled Die Obverse: examine "LIBERTY" and "IN GOD WE TRUST" under 10× magnification for a secondary shifted image alongside the primary lettering.

10x magnification close-up of the Anna May Wong 2022 quarter obverse showing the In Cod We Trust variety where the G in GOD appears missing or very faint

Anna May Wong "In Cod We Trust" variety: the "G" in GOD is absent or very faint due to a grease-filled die. A novelty variety with limited numismatic premium.

The Maya Angelou "Doubled Earring" is the most significant variety of the 2022 series year. It results from the Single Squeeze hubbing process, where the hub tilted slightly during the die impression, producing a distinct secondary smear image near the earring on the reverse. This is meaningfully different from machine doubling — the common "shelf" effect on dates and lettering that adds no value.

ℹ️ Major Errors Are Out of Scope Here

Significant mint errors — including the "Ghost Comet" die clash on the Sally Ride quarter and the "Drooling George" die breaks — can command substantial premiums but are outside the scope of this standard value guide. See our 2022 Quarter Errors Guide for full identification and values.

2022 Quarter Identification Guide

The 2022 American Women Quarter series introduces complexity with multiple mints, multiple finishes, and five distinct designs. Use this step-by-step triage to correctly categorize your coin before estimating its value.

Step 1: Confirm the Date and Obverse Type

All 2022 quarters carry the new Laura Gardin Fraser "Type 2" obverse — a right-facing Washington portrait with deeply modeled, textured hair and a sharper neck truncation than the 1932–2021 Flanagan design. All genuine 2022 quarters should carry a mint mark.

Step 2: Find the Mint Mark

2022 American Women Quarter obverse with a red circle and arrow highlighting the mint mark location on the right side below IN GOD WE TRUST

Mint mark location on the 2022 Washington Quarter: look on the obverse (heads side), right side, just below the motto "IN GOD WE TRUST."

  • P = Philadelphia (common business strike; circulated freely in commerce)
  • D = Denver (common business strike; circulated freely in commerce)
  • S = San Francisco (special issue — proceed to Step 3)
  • No mint mark = Suspect a grease-filled die error (P mint) or an altered coin. All genuine 2022 quarters should have a visible mint mark.

Step 3: Identify the S-Mint Finish — The Critical Money Step

An "S" mint mark on a 2022 quarter can indicate three very different coins, each with a different value. Hold the coin approximately 6 inches from a light source and apply the reflection test.

Side-by-side comparison showing an S-mint 2022 American Women Quarter NIFC business strike with cartwheel luster versus an S-mint proof with mirror fields and frosted devices

How to distinguish an S-mint Business Strike (NIFC) from an S-mint Proof: the proof (right) shows mirror-like fields with frosty, white-appearing devices; the NIFC business strike (left) has "cartwheel" luster — a rotating spoke of light when tilted — but no mirror reflection. (Illustration — not photos of your exact coins)

  • Mirror-like fields + frosted (white/matte) devices + copper edge stripe:S-Mint Clad Proof. Value: $4.00–$8.00.
  • Mirror-like fields + frosted devices + solid silver-colored edge (no copper stripe):S-Mint Silver Proof. Value: ~$24.30+ at current silver spot.
  • Shiny but NOT mirrored — exhibits "cartwheel" luster (a rotating spoke of light) when tilted + copper edge stripe:S-Mint Business Strike (NIFC). Value: $3.00–$18.00+ depending on design and grade. These were sold directly to collectors and never circulated — keep this coin.

Step 4: Identify the Reverse Design

Match your coin's reverse to one of the five 2022 releases. Design order is also relevant for determining "First Strike" eligibility windows:

  • Design 1 (January): Woman with arms raised, bird in flight, radiating sun. → Maya Angelou. Check reverse for the Doubled Earring variety (VDDR-001).
  • Design 2 (March): Astronaut in spacesuit, Earth visible through space shuttle window. → Dr. Sally Ride. (Die clash errors are out of scope — see the errors guide.)
  • Design 3 (June): Woman in decorative shawl, star, text "Principal Chief." → Wilma Mankiller. Check obverse "LIBERTY" and "IN GOD WE TRUST" for the Doubled Die Obverse variety.
  • Design 4 (August): Woman among yucca flowers, Spanish text "VOTO PARA LA MUJER." → Nina Otero-Warren. Examine the face for die cracks.
  • Design 5 (October): Head resting on hand, dot border ("Marquee Lights") around rim. → Anna May Wong. Check obverse motto for the "In Cod We Trust" grease-filled die variety.

Step 5: Condition Triage

  • Heavily or lightly circulated (dull, gray, visible scratches): P or D mint → face value, spend it. S mint → keep it regardless of condition.
  • Uncirculated with blazing cartwheel luster, no cheek scratches: Place in a 2×2 holder. Evaluate MS66+ potential before considering professional grading submission.
  • Fraser portrait grading focal points: Inspect the high point of the hair above the ear and the cheekbone first — these are the initial areas to lose luster or acquire bag marks, and the first places graders examine on the 2022 obverse.

2022 Quarter Value FAQs

What is a 2022 American Women Quarter worth?

Most 2022 quarters found in pocket change (P or D mint) are worth face value — $0.25. Typical uncirculated examples (MS63–65) bring $1.00–$2.00. High-grade specimens (MS66) range from $4.00 to $9.00 depending on design. S-mint business strike (NIFC) coins are worth $3.00–$18.00+ depending on design and grade. Silver proofs carry a melt floor of approximately $24.30 at January 2026 spot prices. Trophy-level MS68/MS69 business strikes have realized $1,500–$2,500 at auction.

What is an S-mint 2022 quarter, and why is it worth more?

The San Francisco Mint produced a special run of business-strike 2022 quarters sold exclusively to collectors in 100-coin bags and three-roll sets — they were never released into general circulation through the Federal Reserve banking system. These are called NIFC (Not Intended for Circulation) coins. With approximately 300,000 minted per design (versus hundreds of millions for P and D issues), they carry a meaningful numismatic premium: $3.00–$6.00 in typical BU grades and up to $12.00–$18.00 at MS66 for the Maya Angelou design. Even a circulated S-mint coin found outside a collection is worth more than face value to album collectors.

Which 2022 quarter design is worth the most?

The Maya Angelou quarter has the highest documented MS66 premium among the five 2022 designs, particularly for the S-mint NIFC ($12.00–$18.00 at MS66 vs. $10.00–$15.00 for the other four designs), because its large open sky fields make high grades harder to achieve. However, the Anna May Wong D-mint MS69 holds the top individual auction record at $362–$2,500 — driven by the near-impossibility of achieving MS69 on a business strike coin.

Is my 2022 quarter silver?

The vast majority of 2022 quarters are not silver — this includes all P-mint, D-mint, S-mint business strike, and S-mint clad proof coins, which use standard cupronickel clad copper composition. Only the S-mint Silver Proof quarters are silver (99.9% fine, 0.2039 troy oz per coin). To identify one: inspect the edge — if you see a copper-colored center stripe, the coin is clad. A uniformly silver-colored edge with no stripe indicates a genuine silver proof. You can also weigh the coin: a silver proof weighs 6.343 grams vs. 5.670 grams for a clad quarter.

What is the melt value of a 2022 silver proof quarter?

As of January 29, 2026, with silver spot at approximately $119.18 per troy ounce, the melt value of a 2022 Silver Proof quarter is approximately $24.30 (0.2039 troy oz × $119.18). A complete five-coin 2022 Silver Proof Set contains roughly 1.02 troy ounces of silver, placing its melt value at approximately $121.50 — well above the original U.S. Mint issue price of roughly $73.00. Monitor current spot prices at APMEX or similar bullion sources, as melt value fluctuates daily with silver markets.

Should I submit my 2022 quarter to PCGS or NGC?

Only submit coins you have strong reason to believe grade MS66 or higher. At MS60–MS65, the cost of professional grading ($30+) typically exceeds the coin's entire market value. The break-even grade is MS66. The jump from MS67 to MS68 can represent a $20–$300 value increase depending on design. Before submitting, inspect the hair above the ear and cheekbone on the Fraser obverse — these are the first grading focal points. S-mint NIFC coins warrant submission at lower thresholds given their inherent scarcity premium above the P/D population.

What is the Maya Angelou "Doubled Earring" variety?

Cataloged as VDDR-001 by Variety Vista, the Maya Angelou Doubled Earring is a Class VIII doubled die reverse. It results from the Single Squeeze hubbing process, where the hub tilted slightly during the die impression, producing a distinct secondary outline of the earring below the primary earring on the reverse. Because this is a die-level feature (not random damage), every coin struck from that die will show it. Raw examples sell for approximately $20–$50. See the Variety Vista DDR listings for full diagnostic details.

What is the new "Type 2" obverse on 2022 quarters?

Starting in 2022, the U.S. Mint adopted the Laura Gardin Fraser portrait of Washington — a design originally sculpted in 1931 that was passed over in favor of John Flanagan's portrait at the time. Fraser's portrait faces right and features significantly more textured, deeply modeled hair and a sharper neck truncation than the modernized Flanagan dies used through 2021. This "Type 2" obverse is shared by all five 2022 AWQ designs and presents distinct grading challenges: the elevated hair relief creates a higher strike requirement, and the hair above the ear becomes the primary wear indicator.

Can I find an S-mint 2022 quarter in my pocket change?

Almost certainly not under normal circumstances. The S-mint 2022 business strike quarters were sold exclusively in collector rolls and bags directly through the U.S. Mint — they were never distributed through the Federal Reserve's commercial banking system. If you do encounter an S-mint 2022 quarter outside of a collection, it was broken out of a collector roll and is worth more than face value regardless of condition. Do not spend it.

Methodology & Sources

Values in this guide reflect market data as of January 2026, synthesized from the following primary authorities:

All prices are typical market values as of January 2026; individual coins may sell for more or less depending on eye appeal, label, and real-time market conditions. Silver proof melt values fluctuate with daily spot prices. This guide covers standard non-error issues only — see the 2022 Quarter Errors Guide for error values.

A note on images: To help illustrate coin diagnostics and rare varieties — especially complex errors that are difficult to describe in text alone — this guide uses AI-generated images. All written values, diagnostics, and variety attributions have been manually reviewed against the cited sources above. While our editorial team works to ensure every image is accurate and helpful, AI-generated illustrations may occasionally misrepresent fine details. If you spot any discrepancy between an image and its written description, please contact us or leave a comment below — we review all feedback and correct errors promptly. Numismatic knowledge is a community effort, and your input helps us build a more accurate resource for everyone.

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