Hyper-inflation has come to the United States Mint

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by beerandchips, Jan 19, 2026 at 2:54 PM.

  1. beerandchips

    beerandchips New Member

    The US Mint has raised prices on all items. The price increases are shocking. Here are a few examples.

    Proof American Silver Eagle, was $95, now $173. An increase of 82%.
    US Proof Set, was $40.25, now $107. An increase of 166%.
    US Uncirculated Mint Set, was $33.25, now $124.50. An increase of 274%
    Morgan Proof silver coins, was $95, now $173. An increase of 82%.
    US Silver Proof Set, was $150, now $245. An increase of 63%.

    The above are the 5 top selling items for 2025. All clad and silver items have price increases. I understand that the silver items need to move in step with the silver price, but I do not understand the large price increases for the non-precious metal items.
     
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  3. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins Supporter

    End of the road for me and them.....at least till their stuff comes back down to earth. Till then I'll concentrate on after market values (if any materialize) and my classic commemoratives........
     
    LakeEffect and CoinCorgi like this.
  4. JoshuaP

    JoshuaP Well-Known Member

    That's wild. The mint reminds me of how many thrift stores have gone. Instead of fair rates, they have gone completely greedy.
     
  5. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    I haven’t bought from them in years due to over inflated prices. The mint raises their prices more than the government raises my social security income. And they still tax me in that as well.
     
    Jeffjay likes this.
  6. numist

    numist Member Supporter

    I quit buying from them long ago. However I did look to see the price on the silver proof set because of our 250 year anniversary but quickly decided I can do without... $245.. ouch!
     
    Jeffjay likes this.
  7. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins Supporter

    I can take a dealer tacking on an extra $35 on a (50 cent) commem I'm buying but I choke at the thought of paying hundreds more on mint products this year. My collecting endeavor has drastically shifted away from moderns. It's a hard decision to make but the Mint has now just outpriced themselves in my estimation.
     
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  8. Vess1

    Vess1 CT SP VIP Supporter

    I heard a suggestion that maybe they are short on silver and have raised prices so high in hopes to slow down the buying. Apmex won't accept an order below $500 now.
     
  9. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Haha, I’ve spent less than $500 at Ampex.
     
  10. Snowman

    Snowman Senior Member

    Wow - I can see for the silver sets - but why the other sets .... the uncirculated sets ???? 124.50 ...sounds like Greed !!!!
     
    numist likes this.
  11. Burton Strauss III

    Burton Strauss III Brother can you spare a trime? Supporter

    It's not hyperinflation as that term is defined.

    The last time the mint set prices, silver was below $30/oz. They have had long term contracts and hedged against silver price increases. With silver now 3x or even 4x what they used to pay, it's no surprise that prices have increased.

    Is it an absurd surcharge over melt? Yep. But it's always been so.
     
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  12. LakeEffect

    LakeEffect Average Circulated

    Agreed, it looks like silver is up something close to 200% from this time last year, so the silver increases are understandable, the customary premium over spot not withstanding.

    The regular proof and uncirculated set increases are unfortunate, though. I'm sure a lot of collectors hoping to get the semiquincentennial coins are going to be disappointed.
     
  13. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    Yes, they've been at this for a long time. They charged $10 for the 1971-S proof Ike dollar. It contained about fifty cents worth of silver at the time. 20x the bullion value. (I'm not defending the recent increases, just saying)
     
    -jeffB likes this.
  14. gronnh20

    gronnh20 Well-Known Member

    I went back through my mint purchases. I last purchased the silver proof set in 2020 right before the price hike. I paid $63.25 for the set. The price then went up to $150. Now it went up to $245. Close to the same price hike as in 2020. It looks high because silver is high. And it's the Mint.

    The clad coinage pricing is absurd. That sure looks like they are trying to capitalize on the 250 hoopla. And maybe that cent coin also.
     
    -jeffB likes this.
  15. Histman

    Histman Too Many Coins, Not Enough Time!

    Last year for me. Only because of the 250th anniversary.
     
  16. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    I was still a pretty enthusiastic YN during the Bicentennial. Out of loyalty to my younger self, I might still cave in and buy some of the 250th stuff. I can't imagine it will become a rarity; too many people want it for this occasion, even with these extortionate prices, and even with <gestures around at just everything>.

    Now, if they leave these prices in place for 2027 sets, I envision sales falling off a cliff into a previously-unnoticed mine shaft...
     
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  17. LakeEffect

    LakeEffect Average Circulated

    Well, look at it this way - in 100 years, when you look back at the purchase price, it will seem crazy cheap. ;)
     
  18. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Well, I'm pretty sure that in a hundred years I won't be worrying about how much I overpaid.
     
  19. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    That's what they all say!
     
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