2025 American Women Quarter Value Guide: All Five Designs
Complete price guide for all five 2025 American Women Quarters — Ida B. Wells, Juliette Gordon Low, Dr. Vera Rubin, Stacey Park Milbern, and Althea Gibson. Values by mint mark, grade, and finish including silver proof melt values as of January 2026.
Most 2025 American Women Quarters found in pocket change are worth $0.25 (face value). Silver proof versions carry nearly $24 in silver at January 2026 spot prices, with collector premiums pushing them to $35–$55 per coin. Top-certified MS68 business strikes can reach $150–$400.
- Circulated (P or D mint): Face value — $0.25
- Uncirculated BU (most designs): $0.75–$1.50; Dr. Vera Rubin commands $1.00–$2.00
- MS67 (high grade, P or D): $18–$35 depending on design — Vera Rubin is the highest
- MS68 (trophy grade): $150–$400
- S Clad Proof (PR69 DCAM): $8–$12
- S Silver Proof: $35–$55 (melt floor ~$24 based on silver at $118.92/oz as of Jan 29, 2026)
Value depends on the specific design, mint mark (P, D, or S), grade, and metal content. See full value chart for all five designs →
This guide covers standard (non-error) values only. For mint errors, see our 2025 Quarter Errors Guide.
The 2025 American Women Quarters are the final year of the four-year series (2022–2025) honoring pioneering women in U.S. history. Five distinct reverse designs were released throughout the year: Ida B. Wells, Juliette Gordon Low, Dr. Vera Rubin, Stacey Park Milbern, and Althea Gibson. Philadelphia (P) and Denver (D) struck business strikes for general circulation, while San Francisco (S) produced clad and silver proof collector coins. As the capstone of a historic series — and a year in which silver prices surged dramatically — the 2025 releases occupy a uniquely important place in modern numismatics. For the full series context, see the American Women Quarter Value Guide. For errors and die varieties outside this guide's scope, see our 2025 Quarter Errors Guide.
2025 Quarter Composition & Melt Value
The 2025 American Women Quarters come in two distinct metal compositions. Understanding which type you have is the single most important step in determining value — especially given the extraordinary silver market conditions of early 2026.
Clad Composition (P, D, and S Clad Proofs)
Standard circulating quarters (P and D mints) and the S-mint clad proof quarters share the same cupro-nickel clad composition. The base metal content yields a melt value of approximately $0.05–$0.07 per coin at current copper and nickel prices — well below the $0.25 face value. For clad coins there is no "melt floor"; value is entirely derived from face value or numismatic condition rarity.
Silver Proof Composition (S Mint — Silver Only)
The S-mint silver proof quarters are struck in 99.9% fine silver with an actual silver weight (ASW) of 0.199 troy ounces per coin. At the January 29, 2026 silver spot price of approximately $118.92 per troy ounce, the intrinsic melt value of a single 2025 silver proof quarter is approximately $23.67 — nearly $24.00.
This creates a hard intrinsic value floor unlike any seen in recent years for modern proof quarters. The U.S. Mint was forced to suspend and reprice its silver products in January 2026; the 2025 Silver Proof Set was adjusted to approximately $245.00 to reflect updated metal costs. Collectors should be aware that if silver prices retrace, the numismatic premium alone may not sustain current price levels.
⚠️ Silver Pricing Risk
The elevated entry price for 2025 silver proofs reflects the "Silver Squeeze" market conditions of January 2026. If silver spot prices fall significantly, these coins could lose substantial dollar value. Buy for the numismatic interest, not as a guaranteed investment.
ℹ️ Is My Quarter from a Silver Proof Set Actually Silver?
Only the S-mint coins included specifically in the Silver Proof Set are struck in 99.9% silver. P-mint and D-mint business strikes are always clad, regardless of condition or packaging. Use the edge test and weight test in the Identification Guide below to confirm your coin's composition.
2025 Quarter Value Chart by Design, Mint Mark & Grade
The following tables show typical retail values for all five 2025 American Women Quarter designs, organized by finish type. Values are drawn from the PCGS Price Guide, the NGC Price Guide, and realized auction data as of January 2026.
ℹ️ Newly Issued Coin — Developing Population Data
As 2025 issues, grading population data for these quarters is still developing. Early submission numbers may not fully reflect the distribution of high-grade coins, particularly for the later designs released in Q3–Q4 2025. Values in the MS67–MS68 range may shift as more coins are submitted. Check the PCGS Auction Prices and NGC Coin Census for the most current population data.
⚠️ No 2025-W Quarters Exist
The West Point "W" circulating quarter program concluded in 2020. There are no 2025-W quarters. Any listing claiming a 2025-W quarter is likely a misidentified 2020 coin, an altered item, or a plated replica. Do not pay a premium for a purported 2025-W quarter.
Grade comparison: a typical circulated 2025 quarter (left) versus a certified MS67 example (right) showing the clean surfaces and sharp detail required for top grades. (Illustration — not a photo of your exact coin.)
Ida B. Wells Quarter Value (Design 1 — Released Q1 2025)
The inaugural 2025 release, honoring the investigative journalist, suffragist, and civil rights crusader. Minted in large quantities at both Philadelphia and Denver, it is readily available in circulation. High-grade examples must contend with the complex hair detail of the Fraser obverse, which picks up contact marks easily.
2025 Ida B. Wells American Women Quarter — the first design released in the final year of the AWQ program.
| Mint | Finish | Circulated | BU (Typical) | Proof (PR69 DCAM) | Silver Proof | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | Business | $0.25 | $0.75–$1.50 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $18–$25 |
| D | Business | $0.25 | $0.75–$1.50 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $18–$25 |
| S | Clad Proof | N/A | N/A | $8.00–$12.00 | N/A | PR69/70 typically sold in sets |
| S | Silver Proof | N/A | N/A | N/A | $35.00–$45.00 | Melt floor ~$24 at current silver spot |
Juliette Gordon Low Quarter Value (Design 2 — Released Q2 2025)
Honoring the founder of Girl Scouts of the USA, this design features a portrait of Low with the Girl Scout trefoil. Its crossover appeal among Scouting memorabilia collectors supports demand beyond traditional numismatics, helping sustain premiums for high-grade rolls and certified examples.
| Mint | Finish | Circulated | BU (Typical) | Proof (PR69 DCAM) | Silver Proof | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | Business | $0.25 | $0.75–$1.50 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $18–$22 |
| D | Business | $0.25 | $0.75–$1.50 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $18–$22 |
| S | Clad Proof | N/A | N/A | $8.00–$12.00 | N/A | Deep Cameo (DCAM) standard at this mint |
| S | Silver Proof | N/A | N/A | N/A | $35.00–$45.00 | Consistent with series silver premium |
Dr. Vera Rubin Quarter Value (Design 3 — Released Q3 2025)
Honoring the astronomer whose work provided key evidence for dark matter, the Rubin quarter features an intricate reverse with spiral galaxies. Early production reports and collector feedback suggest the 2025-P Vera Rubin may have a lower effective survival rate in high grades due to striking difficulties in the complex reverse fields — making it the emerging condition rarity of the 2025 set. When evaluating uncirculated examples, check for complete definition in the spiral galaxy details.
2025 Dr. Vera Rubin American Women Quarter — the intricate galaxy spiral reverse creates striking challenges that make certified high-grade examples the scarcest of the 2025 set.
| Mint | Finish | Circulated | BU (Typical) | Proof (PR69 DCAM) | Silver Proof | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | Business | $0.25 | $1.00–$2.00 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $25–$35 — scarcest P-mint of 2025 |
| D | Business | $0.25 | $1.00–$2.00 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $20–$30 |
| S | Clad Proof | N/A | N/A | $8.00–$12.00 | N/A | Quality generally high in proof finish |
| S | Silver Proof | N/A | N/A | N/A | $40.00–$55.00 | Highest demand silver proof of the 2025 set |
Stacey Park Milbern Quarter Value (Design 4 — Released Q3/Q4 2025)
Honoring the disability justice activist, the Milbern quarter features a dynamic design. Released in late summer 2025, distribution was uneven in certain regions, creating localized shortages that drove temporary roll premiums. As distribution stabilizes, circulated values settle at face value.
| Mint | Finish | Circulated | BU (Typical) | Proof (PR69 DCAM) | Silver Proof | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | Business | $0.25 | $0.75–$1.50 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $18–$22 |
| D | Business | $0.25 | $0.75–$1.50 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $18–$22 |
| S | Clad Proof | N/A | N/A | $8.00–$12.00 | N/A | Standard proof pricing for the set |
| S | Silver Proof | N/A | N/A | N/A | $35.00–$45.00 | Driven by ~$24 melt value floor |
Althea Gibson Quarter Value (Design 5 — Released Q4 2025)
As the final quarter of the entire American Women Quarters Program, the Gibson design carries series-finale appeal for collectors seeking the bookend of the set. Released in October 2025, it is still filtering through distribution channels as of early 2026. When evaluating uncirculated examples, look for full definition in the tennis racket strings — strike weakness in this central area can limit grade potential.
| Mint | Finish | Circulated | BU (Typical) | Proof (PR69 DCAM) | Silver Proof | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | Business | $0.25 | $0.75–$1.50 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $18–$25; series finale premium |
| D | Business | $0.25 | $0.75–$1.50 | N/A | N/A | MS67: $18–$25 |
| S | Clad Proof | N/A | N/A | $8.00–$12.00 | N/A | Series finale appeal; Deep Cameo standard |
| S | Silver Proof | N/A | N/A | N/A | $35.00–$45.00 | Bookend of the AWQ program; melt-driven |
2025 AWQ Collector Set Pricing (January 2026)
Many collectors acquire all five designs in the original U.S. Mint packaging. Silver market conditions have dramatically impacted set prices:
| Set | Contents | Typical Retail (Jan 2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 Clad Proof Set | 10 coins including 5 AWQ clad proof quarters | $50–$60 | Standard collector set; all clad composition |
| 2025 Silver Proof Set (quarters only) | 5 AWQ silver quarters | $135–$150+ | Sharply elevated due to silver spot prices; Mint repriced to ~$245 for full set |
| 2025 Limited Edition Silver Proof Set | 8 coins (5 quarters + Silver Eagle, Dime, Half Dollar) | $340–$595 | Limited to 25,000 sets; sealed PF70 certified set asking ~$1,500 |
⚠️ The Value Cliff: MS66 vs. MS67
An MS66 example may sell for around $5, while an MS67 of the same design commands $18–$35. This gap exists because MS66 is relatively common in fresh mint bags, but the pristine, mark-free surfaces required for MS67 are statistically rare given high-speed minting and bulk bagging. Professional grading fees typically run $25–$50 per coin — only justify submission if you have high confidence the coin reaches MS67 or above.
Values represent typical market prices as of January 2026. For the complete series price guide, see our American Women Quarter Value Guide.
Most Valuable 2025 Quarter Varieties
The 2025 American Women Quarters feature two tiers of notable non-error varieties: trophy-level coins where value comes from certified perfection, and findable die varieties that can be cherry-picked from circulation rolls or proof sets.
A) Trophy-Level: Top-Certified and Condition-Rarity Examples
In the modern registry-set era, prices for top-graded coins are driven by collector competition for the finest known examples. For 2025 quarters, MS68 represents the practical ceiling for business strikes, with PF70 Ultra Cameo as the proof standard.
| What | Why It Is Valuable | Grade / Requirement | Documented Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-P or D Business Strike (Top Pop) | Condition scarcity — high-speed minting and bag handling leave contact marks; a flawless cheek is 1 in 10,000 | MS68 (PCGS or NGC) | $150–$400 (stabilizing as populations rise) |
| 2025-S Silver Proof (Perfect 70) | Certified perfection plus silver premium; "First Day of Issue" labels compound demand | PF70 Ultra Cameo | $100–$150 per single coin |
| 2025 Limited Edition Silver Proof Set (Sealed / PF70) | Mintage limited to 25,000 sets; 8 coins all in 99.9% silver including Silver Eagle | Sealed / PF70 Set | $1,500 (asking price for certified set) |
| 2025-S Althea Gibson (Series Finale, Top Grade) | Final coin of the entire AWQ program; "bookend" premium for collectors completing the series | MS68 | ~$2,000 (speculative / early listing) |
ℹ️ Market Reality Check
"First to market" premiums for top-pop 2025 quarters tend to be highest immediately after release, then stabilize as more coins are certified and populations grow. Monitor the PCGS Auction Prices and NGC Coin Census regularly to track value trends as populations develop.
B) Findable Die Varieties: Cherry-Picking Opportunities
Several significant Doubled Die varieties have been identified for 2025 by authoritative researchers, including James Wiles, Ph.D. at Variety Vista. These can be found in ordinary bank rolls or proof sets using a 10x or stronger loupe. The "Single Squeeze" hubbing method used by the Mint tends to produce doubling near the center of the design, affecting dates, mottos, and central design elements. The most fertile hunting grounds for 2025 are the Ida B. Wells obverse (for DDOs) and the Vera Rubin reverse (for DDRs).
2025-P Ida B. Wells DDO WDDO-001 diagnostic: look for strong northward doubling on the "20" in the date and eastward doubling in the hair and eyelid area under 10x magnification.
| Variety | How to Identify (Key Pickup Points) | Attribution | Typical Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-P Ida B. Wells DDO (WDDO-001) | Strong doubling North on "20" in date; doubling East on hair and eyelid. Master Die Doubling (Class VIII). | Variety Vista / Wexler | $20–$50 raw/BU |
| 2025-P Ida B. Wells DDO (WDDO-002) | Strong doubling East on "OD" in GOD in the motto; also affects hair and eyelid. Separate die pairing from WDDO-001. | Wexler Verified | $25–$60 raw/BU |
| 2025-S Vera Rubin DDR (VDDR-001) | Doubled neckerchief, extra hair lock, and doubling on text "DARK MATTER". First major S-mint variety for 2025. | Variety Vista Verified | $45–$75+ (early discovery pricing) |
| 2025-D Vera Rubin DDO | Doubling on Washington's profile — ear and hair. Less dramatic than the reverse variety but a valid collectible. | Attributed | $10–$20 |
2025-S Vera Rubin DDR VDDR-001 diagnostic: examine the neckerchief fabric and the "DARK MATTER" inscription on the reverse under 10x magnification for distinct doubled lines and thickening.
For full updated DDO and DDR listings, see Variety Vista DDO Listings for American Women Quarters. Major mint errors (off-center strikes, wrong planchets, broadstrikes) are out of scope for this guide — see our 2025 Quarter Errors Guide for those.
2025 Quarter Identification Guide
With silver prices at historic highs in January 2026, correctly identifying your 2025 quarter's composition and type is critical. Use this 30-second checklist to determine what you have.
Step 1 — Find the Mint Mark
Look at the obverse (heads side), to the right of George Washington's neck, just below the motto "IN GOD WE TRUST."
2025 American Women Quarter obverse — the mint mark appears to the right of Washington's neck, below "IN GOD WE TRUST." Look for P, D, or S.
- P (Philadelphia): Common business strike. If circulated, face value. If shiny and new, check for the Ida B. Wells DDO variety (see Variants section).
- D (Denver): Common business strike. If circulated, face value. Check Vera Rubin D-mint examples for the DDO variety.
- S (San Francisco):Stop — you have a collector coin. The S mint produced only Clad Proof and Silver Proof quarters for 2025; there are no S-mint business strikes for this series. Proceed to Step 2.
⚠️ No 2025-W Quarters Were Minted
The West Point "W" circulating quarter program ended in 2020. Any coin listed as a "2025-W" is misidentified, altered, or fraudulent. The U.S. Mint's official 2025 AWQ announcement confirms only P, D, and S facilities produced 2025 quarters.
Step 2 — The Silver Test (S-Mint Coins Only)
If you have an S mint mark, determine whether you hold a Clad Proof (value ~$8–$12) or a Silver Proof (value ~$35–$55). With silver spot near $118/oz, the difference is roughly $10 vs. $40 in value.
The Edge Test (Visual):
Edge comparison: the clad proof quarter (top) shows a visible copper-orange stripe between silver-colored layers; the silver proof quarter (bottom) has a uniform brilliant white edge with no copper layer visible.
- Two-tone / copper stripe visible: Distinct copper-orange layer sandwiched between silver-colored outer layers → Clad Proof. Value: $8–$12.
- Solid brilliant white edge: Uniform silver-white reeded edge with no copper trace → likely Silver Proof. Value: $35–$55.
The Weight Test (Definitive): Use a calibrated digital scale with at least 0.01g precision.
Weight test: a digital scale reading 5.67g confirms a clad proof quarter; 6.34g confirms a silver proof quarter. The 0.67g difference reflects silver's higher density compared to the copper-nickel clad core.
- ~5.67 grams: Clad Proof.
- ~6.34 grams: Silver Proof — the higher density of silver versus the copper-nickel clad core accounts for the 0.67g difference and is the most reliable confirmation.
Step 3 — Proof vs. Business Strike
Proof vs. business strike comparison: the S-mint proof (left) has mirror-like reflective fields with a frosted design; the P/D business strike (right) has the cartwheel luster of a circulation coin. (Illustration — not a photo of your exact coin.)
- Proof (S-mint): Mirror-like reflective fields (background), frosted raised design elements, sharp squared rims. Deep Cameo (DCAM) is the modern standard.
- Business Strike (P or D): Cartwheel luster radiating from center outward — not mirror-like. Contact marks are normal on circulated examples.
Step 4 — Check for Varieties (P and S Mint Targets)
If you have a 2025-P Ida B. Wells quarter, use 10x magnification on the obverse and examine the date "2025" and the motto "IN GOD WE TRUST" for split serifs, letter spreading, or letters that appear "fat" or stamped twice slightly apart — these are the diagnostic signs of the WDDO-001 or WDDO-002 variety.
If you have a 2025-S Vera Rubin silver proof, examine the reverse neckerchief fabric and the text "DARK MATTER" under 10x magnification for distinct doubled lines or thickening — these indicate the VDDR-001 variety.
Design Quick Reference: Which Quarter Is It?
All five 2025 designs share the Laura Gardin Fraser obverse (Washington facing right). The reverse design identifies the honoree:
- Ida B. Wells: Portrait of the journalist and civil rights activist — Q1 2025 release
- Juliette Gordon Low: Portrait with the Girl Scout trefoil — Q2 2025 release
- Dr. Vera Rubin: Portrait with spiral galaxy imagery and "DARK MATTER" inscription — Q3 2025 release
- Stacey Park Milbern: Dynamic portrait of the disability justice activist — Q3/Q4 2025 release
- Althea Gibson: Portrait with tennis racket imagery — Q4 2025 release (final coin of the series)
Note: The 2026 quarter program transitions to Semiquincentennial (250th anniversary) themes. The 2025 series is the close of the American Women Quarters program.
2025 Quarter Value FAQs
What is a 2025 quarter worth?
Most 2025 quarters found in circulation are worth face value — $0.25. In uncirculated condition, P and D mint examples typically sell for $0.75–$2.00 depending on the design (Dr. Vera Rubin commands the higher end). Certified MS67 examples sell for $18–$35, while MS68 trophy coins reach $150–$400. S-mint silver proof quarters trade for $35–$55, anchored by approximately $24 in silver content at January 2026 spot prices. S-mint clad proofs sell for $8–$12.
Is my 2025 quarter silver?
Only 2025-S Silver Proof quarters are struck in 99.9% fine silver (0.199 troy oz ASW). These coins come exclusively from the U.S. Mint's Silver Proof Set or Limited Edition Silver Proof Set and carry an S mint mark. All P-mint and D-mint quarters are standard clad composition regardless of condition or packaging. To confirm silver content: look at the edge for a solid white color with no copper stripe (silver) versus a visible copper-orange stripe (clad), then verify on a calibrated scale — 6.34g = silver, 5.67g = clad.
Which 2025 quarter design is worth the most?
The Dr. Vera Rubin design is the emerging condition rarity of the 2025 set. The 2025-P Vera Rubin commands MS67 values of $25–$35, notably higher than the $18–$25 range for most other designs, because the intricate spiral galaxy reverse creates striking difficulties that reduce the number of coins achieving top grades. For silver proofs, the Vera Rubin S-mint silver proof commands $40–$55 versus $35–$45 for the other four designs — the highest demand of any 2025 silver proof.
Is a 2025 quarter rare?
In circulated condition, no — all five 2025 designs were minted in large quantities at Philadelphia and Denver and are readily found in pocket change. Rarity is a condition phenomenon for these coins. The Laura Gardin Fraser obverse's high-relief hair detail easily picks up contact marks during high-speed minting and bulk bagging, making a true MS67 or higher example genuinely scarce. The S-mint silver proofs are not rare but are desirable due to their silver content. The Vera Rubin design may prove the scarcest of the five in high grade.
Why are the 2025 silver proof quarters so expensive right now?
Silver spot prices surged to approximately $118.92 per troy ounce as of January 29, 2026. Each 2025 silver proof quarter contains 0.199 troy ounces of silver, giving it an intrinsic melt value of nearly $24. The U.S. Mint repriced its silver products in response, raising the full 2025 Silver Proof Set to approximately $245.00. Retail prices for individual silver proof quarters now run $35–$55, driven primarily by metal value rather than traditional numismatic demand. Track real-time melt value using current silver spot prices at Trading Economics.
Is there a 2025-W quarter?
No. The U.S. Mint's West Point (W) circulating quarter program concluded in 2020. There are no 2025-W quarters. Any listing claiming to sell a "2025-W" quarter is likely offering a misidentified 2020 coin, a plated replica, or a fraudulent item. The U.S. Mint's official 2025 AWQ program announcement confirms only Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco facilities struck 2025 quarters.
What is the Ida B. Wells DDO variety?
Two distinct 2025-P Ida B. Wells Doubled Die Obverse varieties have been attributed. WDDO-001 shows strong northward doubling on the "20" in the date and eastward doubling in the hair and eyelid — it is a Master Die Doubling (Class VIII). WDDO-002 shows distinct doubling on "OD" in the motto "IN GOD WE TRUST," plus hair and eyelid. Both are verified and listed at Variety Vista. WDDO-001 brings $20–$50 raw/BU; WDDO-002 brings $25–$60. Both can be found in ordinary pocket change or bank rolls with a 10x loupe.
Should I get my 2025 quarter professionally graded?
Professional grading fees typically run $25–$50 per coin through PCGS or NGC. Given that an MS66 example sells for roughly $5 and MS67 for $18–$35, only submit coins you are highly confident reach MS67 or better — the math does not support grading MS66 candidates. For S-mint silver proofs, a PF70 Ultra Cameo is worth $100–$150 per coin, making grading economically viable if the coin appears flawless. Always verify certification numbers at PCGS Auction Prices or the NGC website before purchasing high-dollar certified examples.
How do I spot a plated or altered coin being sold as a silver proof?
With silver at historic highs, plated clad coins have appeared in the market. The weight test is the most reliable check: a genuine silver proof weighs approximately 6.34 grams on a calibrated 0.01g scale; a plated clad coin weighs approximately 5.67 grams. The edge test is your second line of defense — look for a uniform brilliant white edge (silver) versus a visible copper stripe (clad). For high-dollar certified purchases, always verify the slab's certification number on the official PCGS or NGC websites before buying. Counterfeit grading holders exist at this value level.
What does "Full Definition" mean for 2025 quarters, and does it affect value?
"Full Definition" is an informal term for coins where the central reverse details are fully and completely struck. On the Althea Gibson design, look for complete definition in the tennis racket strings; on the Vera Rubin design, check for complete, unbroken spirals in the galaxy motif. The Laura Gardin Fraser obverse requires substantial metal flow to fill its high-relief details, which can rob strike sharpness from the reverse. Coins with full, crisp central details tend to achieve higher grades and command premiums over softly struck examples at the same grade level.
Methodology & Sources
Values in this guide reflect typical retail market prices as of January 2026, incorporating the "Silver Squeeze" market conditions observed in late January 2026, when silver spot prices reached approximately $118.92 per troy ounce. Primary sources consulted:
- PCGS Price Guide — American Women Quarters (2022–2025) (accessed January 2026)
- PCGS Auction Prices — American Women Quarters (accessed January 2026)
- NGC Price Guide — American Women Quarters (accessed January 2026)
- NGC Coin Census — American Women Quarters (accessed January 2026)
- Variety Vista — American Women Quarters DDO/DDR Attributions (James Wiles, Ph.D.; updated November 2025)
- U.S. Mint Official 2025 AWQ Program Announcement
- CoinNews — U.S. Mint Silver Product Repricing (January 2026)
- Trading Economics — Silver Spot Price (January 29, 2026)
Prices reflect market conditions as of January 2026 and may change significantly as silver spot prices fluctuate and grading populations develop. This guide covers standard (non-error) varieties only. Always cross-reference with current PCGS and NGC data before buying or selling.
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.
