
Ah, the classic silver dollar! If you're hoping to get one back as change from your morning coffee, you're about 90 years too late. The U.S. Mint stopped striking silver dollars for the humble purpose of general circulation way back in 1935. Any dollar coins you might find jangling in your pocket today are made of far less glamorous metals, like manganese brass.
However, the U.S. Mint is very much still in the business of making silver dollars, just not for you to spend at the grocery store. These modern beauties are aimed squarely at collectors and investors. The Mint actively produces the wildly popular American Silver Eagle and has even brought back the iconic and Peace dollar designs, striking them in lustrous .999 fine silver for a new generation of admirers.
So, in a nutshell, yes, they make silver dollars, and you can even buy the 2025 versions soon. But while they are technically legal tender with a face value of a dollar, you'd be a real goose to use one to buy a gumball. Their actual value, thanks to all that lovely silver, is much, much higher. They're made for admiring, not for spending.


