Determining the current price of 1976 Washington Silver Bicentennial Quarter 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 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40% Bicentennial Quarter | 1976 Washington Bicentennial Silver Quarter | $0.25 | 0.0739 | $5.38 | $21.51 | $215.14 |
The Washington Bicentennial Quarter was struck in 1975 and 1976 to commemorate the 200th anniversary of American independence — all bearing the dual date 1776–1976. The vast majority of Bicentennial quarters in circulation are copper-nickel clad and contain no silver. However, the U.S. Mint also produced a limited 40% silver version exclusively for collectors, sold in special 3-piece Bicentennial Silver Sets. If you have an "S" mint mark Bicentennial quarter in original Mint packaging, it is the silver issue — and it carries real melt value above face.
Each 40% silver Bicentennial Quarter contains 0.0739 troy ounces of pure silver. This guide covers how to identify the silver issues, calculate current melt value, and understand what separates the silver collector pieces from the billions of clad quarters that circulated.
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Obverse Designer | John Flanagan (original 1932 Washington quarter portrait) |
| Reverse Designer | Jack L. Ahr (Colonial drummer boy design) |
| Silver Issue (Year) | 1976-S only (struck 1975–1976, all dated 1776–1976) |
| Silver Content | 40% silver (silver-clad outer layers over silver-copper core) |
| Actual Silver Weight (ASW) | 0.0739 troy ounces |
| Weight | 5.75 grams |
| Diameter | 24.3 mm |
| Edge | Reeded |
| Face Value | $0.25 |
| Melt Value | 0.0739 × Spot Price of Silver |
The dual date 1776–1976 appears on both silver and clad versions — the date alone tells you nothing about silver content. Here is how to tell them apart:
The silver Bicentennial quarters were never released into general circulation. They were sold exclusively through the U.S. Mint as part of two collector products: the 3-Piece Bicentennial Silver Proof Set (quarter, half dollar, dollar — all 40% silver proof strikes) and the 3-Piece Bicentennial Silver Uncirculated Set (same denominations in uncirculated finish). Both sets include a silver quarter, half dollar, and Eisenhower dollar — all with the "S" mint mark.
Each silver Bicentennial Quarter contains 0.0739 troy ounces of pure silver. Calculate current melt value using the live spot price of silver:
Silver Melt Value = 0.0739 × Current Silver Spot Price
At typical silver prices, the melt value of a 40% silver Bicentennial Quarter is modest — considerably less than a 90% silver Washington quarter (pre-1965) at 0.1808 oz ASW, or even a 40% silver Eisenhower Dollar at 0.3161 oz ASW. These coins are typically bought and sold individually or in complete 3-piece sets rather than in bags by face value, given their status as collector-issued rather than circulation pieces.
| Date / Type | Notable Details |
|---|---|
| 1976-S Proof | Deep cameo proof finish; sold in the 3-Piece Bicentennial Silver Proof Set. The most commonly found silver Bicentennial quarter. Mirrors-and-frost proof surface commands a premium over the uncirculated version. |
| 1976-S Uncirculated | Satin finish; sold in the 3-Piece Bicentennial Silver Uncirculated Set alongside the silver half dollar and Eisenhower dollar. Slightly less common than the proof version in today's market; both share identical silver content and ASW. |
The 1976-S 40% silverWashington Bicentennial Quarter occupies a narrow but interesting corner of the U.S. silver coin market. It is the smallest silver denomination in the Bicentennial collector series, containing 0.0739 troy oz of silver — meaningful melt value above its $0.25 face, but modest compared to its larger 40% silver counterparts. Always verify the "S" mint mark and check for original Mint packaging before purchasing as a silver coin; the identical dual-date design on clad versions makes confirmation essential.
For current melt values based on live silver prices, use our silver coin melt value calculator.