1921 Morgan Dollar!

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Chopperhead, Mar 24, 2022.

  1. Chopperhead

    Chopperhead Member

    Okay, don't want to beat a dead horse, but how bout this one? Give me your thoughts. I understand grading to a degree, no where near an expert. But when I compare close ups to pcgs graded coins, I get confused with what I don't see. But I am trying to improve, this is fine speciman, and after your last comments, I looked at details, she looks really good. What do you guys see? Thanks again! 20220324_200602.jpg 20220324_200743.jpg
     
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  3. Matthew Kruse

    Matthew Kruse Young Numismatist

    Circulated very high mintage 1921 Morgan. Grade doesn't really matter for a coin like this, still worth around $25
     
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  4. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    What he said.
     
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  5. derkerlegand

    derkerlegand Well-Known Member

  6. ifthevamzarockin

    ifthevamzarockin Well-Known Member

    This one is better than the other one.
     
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  7. Sting 60

    Sting 60 Well-Known Member

    Yes, maybe $24.
     
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  8. Kentucky

    Kentucky Well-Known Member

    It could be the picture, but the reverse looks kind of dull with no luster. The hair above the ear shows some wear, there are hits on the face/cheek and on the fields in front of the face. AU 50 or 53 but I'm terrible at this BTW, nowadays I would say more $30
     
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  9. Spark1951

    Spark1951 Accomplishment, not Activity

    @Chopperhead …because the mintage is 44,690,000 for the Philly 1921, there are a lot of them available in really good conditions. This one is better condition than the other one you posted, but both have the same melt value, currently $19.96USD. So, because they are so plentiful, people get picky and demand is lower. This is why members here are saying the value is between $24-30.

    NGC lists an AU50 for $33.50 or so, but this price is misleading. This price is for certified and slabbed coins. A buyer for your coin would overspend the coins value if he/she slabbed it. The seller ends up lowering the sale price to sell a plentiful coin.

    Even though it is in better condition it still will sell for a lower price because they made so many.

    Maybe another member can explain it better. Silver dollars I have sold to my local coin shop were agreed for well under spot, actually near melt.
     
    ifthevamzarockin likes this.
  10. Razz

    Razz Critical Thinker

    Greysheet on the 21 P from VG to XF40 is $34.
     
  11. Chopperhead

    Chopperhead Member

    You guys are awesome.Thanks
     
  12. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    The off-color doesn't help any. It looks like it could be around EF.
     
  13. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    All Morgans are keepers. Obverse not as good as the reverse but still a very nice coin. Thanks for sharing.
     
  14. Fritz Scott

    Fritz Scott New Member

    Agree all Morgans are keepers..... Good for trades too ....
     
  15. Cowinthehole

    Cowinthehole Active Member

    Oh I have a 1921 Morgan! (Last half year for Morgans) $25 average but definitely a keeper! (Coin is about 101 years old now)
     
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