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  1. Collectibles
  2. Pre-1933 US Gold Coins
  3. $10 Indian Eagles

$10 Indian Eagles overview

The $10 Indian Eagle is a classic denomination of United States gold coinage, struck by the U.S. Mint from 1907 through 1933. Designed by sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens — with the series later continued under his assistant Bela Lyon Pratt's reworked reverse — the coin features a bold Native American chief in a…

Updated June 2026

$10 Indian Eagles

The $10 Indian Eagle is a classic denomination of United States gold coinage, struck by the U.S. Mint from 1907 through 1933. Designed by sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens — with the series later continued under his assistant Bela Lyon Pratt's reworked reverse — the coin features a bold Native American chief in a feathered war bonnet on the obverse and a perched eagle on the reverse. The incuse (recessed) relief design, introduced in 1908, marked a significant departure from the raised-relief tradition of earlier U.S. coinage and remains one of the most distinctive approaches in American numismatic history. Each coin contains .48375 troy oz of pure gold at a fineness of .900. As a pre-1933 U.S. gold issue, the $10 Indian Eagle spans a relatively short mintage window across Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco facilities. Survivors range from well-circulated examples to choice uncirculated (MS-63 and above) specimens, with several dates and mint marks recognized as conditionally scarce at higher Sheldon grades. The series also includes branch-mint issues that draw particular interest from date-and-mint collectors building complete sets. On CoinDuffle, buyers will find $10 Indian Eagles across a range of dates, mint marks, and grades — from circulated examples graded by PCGS or NGC to certified uncirculated coins. Listings span individual pieces from multiple vetted dealers, giving collectors access to both entry-level and advanced acquisitions within this series.

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About $10 Indian Eagles

The $10 Indian Eagle is a classic denomination of United States gold coinage, struck by the U.S. Mint from 1907 through 1933. Designed by sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens — with the series later continued under his assistant Bela Lyon Pratt's reworked reverse — the coin features a bold Native American chief in a feathered war bonnet on the obverse and a perched eagle on the reverse. The incuse (recessed) relief design, introduced in 1908, marked a significant departure from the raised-relief tradition of earlier U.S. coinage and remains one of the most distinctive approaches in American numismatic history. Each coin contains .48375 troy oz of pure gold at a fineness of .900.

As a pre-1933 U.S. gold issue, the $10 Indian Eagle spans a relatively short mintage window across Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco facilities. Survivors range from well-circulated examples to choice uncirculated (MS-63 and above) specimens, with several dates and mint marks recognized as conditionally scarce at higher Sheldon grades. The series also includes branch-mint issues that draw particular interest from date-and-mint collectors building complete sets.

On CoinDuffle, buyers will find $10 Indian Eagles across a range of dates, mint marks, and grades — from circulated examples graded by PCGS or NGC to certified uncirculated coins. Listings span individual pieces from multiple vetted dealers, giving collectors access to both entry-level and advanced acquisitions within this series.

Frequently asked questions

The $10 Indian Eagle is a U.S. gold coin struck from 1907 to 1933, featuring an incuse (recessed-relief) design with a Native American chief on the obverse and an eagle on the reverse. It was designed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens and contains .48375 troy oz of pure gold at .900 fineness. It is one of the most artistically distinctive denominations in the pre-1933 U.S. gold series.
The series was produced from 1907 through 1933 at the Philadelphia (no mint mark), Denver (D), and San Francisco (S) Mints. Not every mint struck coins every year, making certain date-and-mint combinations scarcer than others. The final year, 1933, is among the most sought-after issues in the series, though examples rarely come to market.
Both are $10 U.S. gold coins of the same .900 fineness, but they differ in era and design. The Liberty Eagle was struck from 1838 to 1907 and features a coronet-crowned Liberty head. The Indian Eagle, introduced in 1907, uses a distinctive incuse relief design with a Native American portrait. The Indian Eagle represents a later, stylistically modernized period of U.S. gold coinage.
Circulated examples, graded from VF-20 through AU-58, are the most commonly encountered. Uncirculated (MS-60 and above) coins exist but become progressively scarcer at MS-63 and higher. Many coins on the market are certified by PCGS or NGC. The incuse design is prone to showing contact marks in the recessed fields, making high-grade survivors particularly notable within the series.
Most $10 Indian Eagles offered by dealers today are encapsulated in PCGS or NGC hard-plastic slabs, which include a grade, certification number, and designation. Raw (uncertified) examples also appear in the market, often in coin flips or original holders. Certified coins allow collectors to compare grades and varieties consistently across different listings and dealers.

Explore related categories

Browse Pre-1933 US Gold CoinsShop $20 Saint-Gaudens Double EaglesShop $20 Liberty Double EaglesShop $10 Liberty EaglesShop $5 Indian Half EaglesShop $5 Liberty Half EaglesShop $2.5 Indian Quarter EaglesShop $2.5 Liberty Quarter EaglesShop $1 Liberty Gold Dollars (Type 1)

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  • $10 Indian Eagles

Premiums vs spot

See live pricing tied to spot and compare fixed-price and dynamic offers. Higher-demand items can carry larger premiums; check weights, fineness, and mintage before you buy.

Graded vs. raw coins: which should you buy?

Comparison of certified (graded) and raw $10 indian eagles
FactorCertified / graded (PCGS, NGC)Raw / uncertified
AuthenticationThird-party verified and sealed in a tamper-evident holderAssessed by the buyer or dealer
LiquidityHigher — the grade is a standardized, trusted referenceVaries with buyer confidence and condition
Typical premiumHigher (covers grading cost and assurance)Lower — closer to melt or bullion value
Best forNumismatic value and resale confidenceStacking by weight at the lowest cost

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