Graded Morgan Silver Dollars

Graded Morgan Silver Dollars — certified 1878–1921 Morgans by NGC and PCGS. In stock in San Antonio.

6 items

About Graded Morgan Silver Dollars

Graded Morgan Silver Dollars are certified, third-party-graded examples of one of the most widely collected series in American numismatics. Each coin in this category has been encapsulated and assigned a numeric grade — typically on the Sheldon 1–70 scale — by a recognized grading service such as PCGS or NGC, providing a standardized assessment of strike, luster, and surface preservation. Listings here span the full range of collectible grades, from circulated examples graded G-4 through AU-58 to full Mint State pieces ranging from MS-60 through the coveted MS-65 and above, as well as Proof issues where applicable.

The Morgan dollar was struck by the United States Mint from 1878 through 1904, and again in 1921, across facilities in Philadelphia, Carson City, New Orleans, and San Francisco. Designed by George T. Morgan, the coin features a left-facing portrait of Liberty on the obverse and a heraldic eagle on the reverse. Each coin contains .7734 troy oz of pure silver at a fineness of .900. The series is distinguished by its broad date-and-mintmark matrix, offering collectors hundreds of distinct year-mint combinations to pursue — a characteristic that makes registry-set building and date-run collecting both popular pursuits.

On CoinDuffle, this category brings together graded Morgan dollars from multiple dealers, spanning a wide range of dates, mintmarks, and certified grades. Collectors will find key dates, semi-key dates, and common-date examples across PCGS and NGC holders, including CAC-stickered coins where available. Whether you are assembling a date set, chasing a specific mintmark like the CC or S issues, or targeting a particular grade tier, the inventory here reflects the full depth of the graded Morgan dollar market.

Updated June 2026

Frequently asked questions

A graded Morgan Silver Dollar has been submitted to a professional third-party grading service — most commonly PCGS or NGC — where experts evaluate the coin's strike quality, surface preservation, luster, and eye appeal. The coin is then assigned a numeric grade on the Sheldon 1–70 scale and sealed in a tamper-evident plastic holder, commonly called a slab, along with its grade and certification details.