Gold: $4602.77  Silver: $72.78  Platinum: $1924.05  90% Junk $1 FV: $52.04  Gold/Silver Ratio: 63.24

Silver Coin Melt Value Calculator · 1948-1963 Franklin Half Dollar

Determining the current price of 1948-1963 Franklin Half Dollar is a straightforward process once you know the silver content, the weight, and the current market rate, often referred to as the spot price.

Description Face Value ASW Per Coin Per $1 Face Per Bankroll
Franklin Half Dollar 1948-1963 Franklin Half Dollar $0.50 0.3575 $26.02 $52.04 $520.38

Franklin Half Dollar Melt Value

The Franklin Half Dollar was struck from 1948 through 1963, representing the final chapter of 90% silver half dollar coinage before the Kennedy design took over in 1964. Designed by Chief Engraver John R. Sinnock — the same designer behind the Roosevelt Dime — the Franklin Half Dollar features two of America's most enduring icons: Benjamin Franklin and the Liberty Bell. Each coin contains 0.36169 troy ounces of pure silver.

This guide covers silver content, melt value, mint history, key dates, and the Full Bell Lines grading designation that significantly affects collector value.

Quick Facts About the Franklin Half Dollar

SpecificationDetails
DesignerJohn R. Sinnock
Minted Years1948–1963
Silver Content90% silver, 10% copper
Actual Silver Weight (ASW)0.36169 troy ounces
Weight12.50 grams
Diameter30.61 mm
EdgeReeded (150 reeds)
Face Value$0.50
Melt Value0.36169 × Spot Price of Silver

Design Overview

  • Obverse: A right-facing portrait of Benjamin Franklin with "LIBERTY" above and the date below. Sinnock's initials "JRS" appear at the truncation of the neck.
  • Reverse: The Liberty Bell dominates the center, with a small eagle to the right — included to satisfy a legal requirement that half dollars feature an eagle. "UNITED STATES OF AMERICA" and "HALF DOLLAR" complete the design.

Where Were Franklin Half Dollars Minted?

The mint mark appears on the reverse, above the Liberty Bell beam. Three facilities produced Franklin Half Dollars:

  • Philadelphia (no mint mark) — Highest annual mintages most years
  • Denver ("D") — Produced throughout the series
  • San Francisco ("S") — Struck from 1949 to 1954 only; all S-mint Franklin halves are scarcer than their Philadelphia counterparts

Understanding Franklin Half Dollar Melt Value

Each Franklin Half Dollar contains 0.36169 troy ounces of pure silver. Calculate current melt value using the live spot price of silver:

Silver Melt Value = 0.36169 × Current Silver Spot Price
  • Roll (20 coins): 7.234 troy oz silver
  • $10 face value (20 coins): 7.234 troy oz silver
  • $100 face value bag: 72.34 troy oz silver

Full Bell Lines (FBL) — The Key Grading Designation

For Franklin Half Dollars, the "Full Bell Lines" (FBL) designation is critical to understanding collector premiums. FBL refers to complete, unbroken horizontal lines at the bottom of the Liberty Bell on the reverse. Strike quality varied significantly across the series, and many coins — even in uncirculated condition — do not display full bell lines. Certified FBL examples command premiums that can be multiples of standard uncirculated values.

Key Dates and Rare Franklin Half Dollars

Key Date / VarietyNotable Details
1955Lowest mintage of the entire series (2,498,181); key date in all grades. Circulated examples trade well above melt.
1949-SScarce San Francisco issue from the early series; solid premium in higher circulated grades
1953-SLow S-mint production; one of the more collected San Francisco dates in the series
1948-DFirst Denver issue of the series; popular with collectors building year-by-year sets
Any date — Full Bell LinesFBL certification adds significant premium across the series; 1950, 1955, and 1963 FBL examples are particularly valuable

Investment Potential of Franklin Half Dollars

  • Identical Silver Content to Kennedy 1964: At 0.36169 oz ASW, Franklin Halves offer the same silver per coin as the more famous 1964 Kennedy, often at comparable or lower premiums for common dates.
  • Complete Series Within Reach: The 16-year series is short enough that building a full date-and-mint-mark set is achievable for most collectors.
  • FBL Upside: Strike quality variations mean high-grade FBL coins carry substantial numismatic premiums above the bullion floor.
  • S-Mint Scarcity: All San Francisco issues trade at a premium, offering differentiated value within junk silver holdings.

Final Thoughts

Struck from 1948 to 1963, the Franklin Half Dollar bridges the classic and modern eras of American silver coinage. Common circulated dates trade efficiently near melt value, while key dates and Full Bell Lines specimens offer collector premium potential that extends well beyond intrinsic silver content.

For current melt values based on live silver prices, use our silver coin melt value calculator. Consult a qualified numismatist for Full Bell Lines specimens and key-date San Francisco issues.

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