1799 Draped Bust Dollar Value

A 1799 Draped Bust Dollar is worth roughly $216 to $30,005 depending on its condition, and its metal content alone is worth $28.24 as of 2026-06-01 Certified examples in top grades can run far higher.

Public domain image (struck or printed before 1926). Click to enlarge.

1799 Draped Bust Dollar value by grade

1799 Draped Bust Dollar value by grade
GradeEstimated value
Melt value floor(metal content, 2026-06-01)$28.24
Good (G-4)$216 to $318
Very Good (VG-8)$312 to $459
Fine (F-12)$456 to $671
Very Fine (VF-20)$720 to $1,059
Extremely Fine (XF-40)$1,200 to $1,765
About Uncirculated (AU-50)$2,040 to $3,001
Mint State (MS-60)$3,601 to $5,295
Choice Unc (MS-63)$6,721 to $9,884
Gem Unc (MS-65)$20,403 to $30,005

Estimated retail range, updated 2026-06-15. Estimates are modeled from mintage rarity and metal content, not auction records. Actual sale prices vary with certification, eye appeal and market timing.

How much is a 1799 Draped Bust Dollar worth today?

At the entry level, well-worn examples bring about $216. The same coin in gem uncirculated condition is a $30,005 coin. Grade is everything: two examples of the 1799 Draped Bust Dollar can differ in price by an order of magnitude based purely on preservation.

1799 Draped Bust Dollar specifications

Series
Draped Bust Dollar
Year
1799
Mint mark
None (Philadelphia)
Mintage
Not recorded
Composition
89.2% silver, 10.8% copper
Weight
26.96 g
Diameter
40 mm
Edge
Lettered HUNDRED CENTS ONE DOLLAR OR UNIT
Designer
Robert Scot
Silver content
0.77370 troy oz

Why this coin has no mint mark

The 1799 Draped Bust Dollar was struck at the Philadelphia Mint, which used no mint mark in this era. If you find no letter where branch-mint coins carry one (None, all were struck at Philadelphia), you are holding a Philadelphia issue.

The value drivers behind this coin

Documented examples of the 1799 Draped Bust Dollar in our reference database anchor what we know about this issue. Mintage records are incomplete, so collector demand and surviving population drive its market.

Beneath the numismatics of the 1799 Draped Bust Dollar sits 0.7737 troy ounces of silver, $28.24 worth at today's spot price. When silver rallies, even the most common dates of this series rise with it.

Context adds the final layer to the 1799 Draped Bust Dollar. The Draped Bust dollar carried the young republic's silver abroad, so effectively that exported and melted coins forced President Jefferson to halt dollar production entirely in 1804, a suspension that lasted three decades. Owning this date means owning a piece of that story, and demand for the series as a whole sustains liquidity for every issue in it.

1799 Draped Bust Dollar inscriptions & design

Obverse

******* LIBERTY ****** 1799

bust of Liberty r., draped with ribbon tied in flowing hair

Reverse

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

eagle within wreath

Measured 1799 Draped Bust Dollar specimens

10 physically measured 1799 Draped Bust Dollar examples in our reference database. Real measured weights and die axes let you authenticate a coin against the 26.96 g, 40 mm minting standard.

Measured 1799 Draped Bust Dollar specimens
SpecimenWeightDiameterDie axisReferences
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #126.857 g39.5 mm-Bolender.1799.1, Breen.5390
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #226.886 g40 mm-Bolender.1799.9, Breen.5391
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #326.495 g40 mm-Bolender.1799.14, Breen.5391
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #426.742 g40 mm-Bolender.1799.8, Breen.5391
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #526.748 g40 mm-Bolender.1799.12a, Breen.5392
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #626.696 g39.5 mm-Bolender.1799.11a, Breen.5392
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #726.896 g39.5 mm-Bolender.1799.9a, Breen.5391
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #826.88 g39.5 mm-Bolender.1799.23, Breen.5393
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #926.931 g40 mm-Bolender.1799.6, Breen.5391
1799 Draped Bust Dollar #1026.996 g40 mm-Bolender.1799.3, Breen.5389

Specifications compiled from documented museum specimens. See our data & methodology page.

Summary: the 1799 Draped Bust Dollar is valued between $216 and $30,005 as of 2026-06-15. Estimates combine mintage rarity, key-date status and metal content; they are editorial guidance, not an offer to buy.