| Survival Estimate | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | 381,007,962 |
| 60 or Better | 114,302,388 |
| 65 or Better | 22,860,477 |
| Numismatic Rarity | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | R-1.0 |
| 60 or Better | R-1.0 |
| 65 or Better | R-1.0 |
| Relative Rarity By Type All Specs in this Type | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | 1 / 61 TIE |
| 60 or Better | 3 / 61 TIE |
| 65 or Better | 6 / 61 TIE |
| Relative Rarity By Series All Specs in this Series | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | 1 / 64 TIE |
| 60 or Better | 4 / 64 TIE |
| 65 or Better | 7 / 64 TIE |
#1 PCGS MS68
Heritage Auctions, August 12, 2024, Lot 3323 – $3,960. Brilliant. |
#1 PCGS MS68
Heritage Auctions, January 5, 2017, Lot 4802 – $8,812.50; “Charlie O’s Collection,” Heritage Auctions, June 6, 2019, Lot 3099 – $5,040; Heritage Auctions, January 9, 2020, Lot 3717 – $4,800; Dr. John O. Phillips; "The Brodie Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). This piece has attractive toning with cobalt edges and golden interiors. |
#1 PCGS MS68
|
#1 PCGS MS68
|
#1 PCGS MS68
|
#6 PCGS MS67+
GreatCollections, August 7, 2016, Lot 381483; Heritage Auctions, March 14, 2018, Lot 23576 – $600. Brilliant. |
#6 PCGS MS67+
Heritage Auctions, September 11, 2016, Lot 7596 – $5,170; Heritage Auctions, April 30, 2017, Lot 7538 – $493.50; Roger Diehl; "The Diehl Washington Quarter Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Lightly toned in gold. |
#6 PCGS MS67+
|
#6 PCGS MS67+
|
#6 PCGS MS67+
|
#6 PCGS MS67+
|
#6 PCGS MS67+
|
#6 PCGS MS67+
|
| #6 PCGS MS67+ |
| #6 PCGS MS67+ |
The transition away from silver coinage led to unprecedented production in 1967. The total output of fractional coins reached a record high of 7.22 billion pieces, struck to combat the nationwide coin shortage of the mid-1960s.
1967 Lincoln Memorial Cent (#2902) | Mintage: 3,048,667,100
1967 Jefferson Nickel (#4079) | Mintage:107,325,800
1967 Roosevelt Dime (#5132) | Mintage: 2,244,007,320
1967 Washington Quarter (#5880) | Mintage: 1,524,031,848
1967 Kennedy Half Dollar (#6710) | Mintage: 295,046,978
The 1967 Washington Quarter mintage of 1.52 billion was more than twice the highest mintage of any preceding 90% silver issue. However, this figure was still lower than the program's record-setting 1965 Washington Quarter (#5878) mintage of 1.82 billion coins.
These gargantuan mintages required the consolidated output from three facilities. The Mints' production figures for the 1967 Washington Quarter were:
To discourage collector hoarding during this period (1965-1967), no mint marks were placed on any circulating coinage.
Circulated examples of the 1967 Washington Quarter (and the 1965 issue) were common until the mid-to-late 1980s, but today they are scarce in commerce and have no numismatic value. Mint State coins are the collector focus. These are more challenging to acquire in quantity due to a historical gap: the Mint did not produce Uncirculated Coin Sets in 1967 (sets were last sold in 1964 and resumed in 1968). While uncirculated 1967 business strikes are not genuinely rare, Gem (MS65 to MS66) and Superb Gem (MS67 and finer) quality examples demand effort to locate. Even quarters cherry-picked by submitters for their quality typically certify at MS65 or MS66 at PCGS. The current top certified grade is MS68.
Complicating the market is the fact that the U.S. Mint produced quasi-Proof coins for Special Mint Sets (SMS).
* * *