If you own a silver coin, one of the first questions you should ask is:
What is the silver coin melt value?
The melt value of a silver coin is the intrinsic value of the silver inside the coin based on the current market price of silver. It does not include collector or numismatic value — only the metal content.
Understanding melt value is essential for investors, stackers, and coin collectors.
What Is Silver Coin Melt Value?
Silver coin melt value refers to the amount of money you would receive if the coin were melted down and sold strictly for its silver content.
It depends on:
- The coin’s silver purity
- The coin’s weight
- The current silver spot price
When silver prices increase, melt values increase.
Current Silver Spot Price (Example)
As of the latest update:
- Silver Spot Price (ASK): $82.12 per ounce
This price is used to calculate melt value.
How to Calculate Silver Coin Melt Value
The formula is simple:
Silver Content (in ounces) × Silver Spot Price = Melt Value
Example 1: American Silver Eagle

- Silver content: 1 troy ounce
- Spot price: $82.12
Melt Value:
1 × 82.12 = $82.12
Example 2: Morgan Silver Dollar (1878–1921)

- Composition: 90% silver
- Silver weight: 0.7734 oz
- Spot price: $82.12
Melt Value:
0.7734 × 82.12 ≈ $63.51
Melt Values of U.S. Silver Coins
| Coin | Composition | Weight (g) | ASW (oz.) | Melt Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jefferson Nickel (1942–1945) | 56% Copper, 35% Silver, 9% Manganese | 5 | 0.0563 | $4.62 |
| Barber Dime (1892–1916) | 90% Silver | 2.5 | 0.0723 | $5.94 |
| Mercury Dime (1916–1945) | 90% Silver | 2.5 | 0.0723 | $5.94 |
| Roosevelt Dime (1946–1964) | 90% Silver | 2.5 | 0.0723 | $5.94 |
| Barber Quarter (1892–1916) | 90% Silver | 6.25 | 0.1808 | $14.85 |
| Standing Liberty Quarter (1916–1930) | 90% Silver | 6.25 | 0.1808 | $14.85 |
| Washington Quarter (1932–1964) | 90% Silver | 6.25 | 0.1808 | $14.85 |
| Barber Half Dollar (1892–1915) | 90% Silver | 12.5 | 0.36169 | $29.70 |
| Walking Liberty Half Dollar (1916–1947) | 90% Silver | 12.5 | 0.36169 | $29.70 |
| Franklin Half Dollar (1948–1963) | 90% Silver | 12.5 | 0.36169 | $29.70 |
| Kennedy Half Dollar (1964) | 90% Silver | 12.5 | 0.36169 | $29.70 |
| Kennedy Half Dollar (1965–1970) | 60% Copper, 40% Silver | 11.5 | 0.1479 | $12.15 |
| Morgan Dollar (1878–1921) | 90% Silver | 26.73 | 0.7734 | $63.51 |
| Peace Dollar (1921–1935) | 90% Silver | 26.73 | 0.7734 | $63.51 |
| Eisenhower Silver Dollar (1971–1976) | 60% Copper, 40% Silver | 24.59 | 0.3161 | $25.96 |
| American Silver Eagle (1986–Date) | 99.93% Silver | 31.101 | 1.0000 | $82.12 |
| America the Beautiful 5 oz (2010–Date) | 99.93% Silver | 155.55 | 5.0000 | $410.60 |
Common U.S. Silver Coin Melt Values
Here are approximate melt values using silver at $82.12 per ounce:
| Coin | Silver Content (oz) | Melt Value |
|---|---|---|
| 90% Silver Dime | 0.0723 | ~$5.94 |
| 90% Silver Quarter | 0.1808 | ~$14.85 |
| 90% Silver Half Dollar | 0.36169 | ~$29.70 |
| Morgan Dollar | 0.7734 | ~$63.51 |
| 1 oz Silver Coin | 1.0 | ~$82.12 |
Melt Value vs Numismatic Value
Important distinction:
- Melt Value = metal only
- Numismatic Value = metal + rarity + condition + demand
A rare Morgan Dollar in high grade can be worth thousands — even if its melt value is only around $63.
Never sell a collectible coin based only on melt value without checking its collector value first.
Why Silver Coin Melt Value Matters
✔ Helps investors know minimum intrinsic value
✔ Protects sellers from undervaluing coins
✔ Tracks market metal trends
✔ Important for bulk silver (“junk silver”) calculations
If you own 100 silver quarters, knowing melt value allows you to calculate the total silver worth instantly.
Final Thoughts
Silver coin melt value represents the raw metal worth of your coin based on the current silver spot price.
It changes daily — sometimes hourly — depending on the precious metals market.
Before selling or buying silver coins:
- Check the current silver price
- Calculate melt value
- Compare with numismatic value
Understanding melt value gives you a financial advantage.










