1 oz American Eagle Palladium Coin (Random Date)

1 oz American Eagle Palladium Coin (Random Date)
1 oz American Eagle Palladium Coin (Random Date)
1 oz American Eagle Palladium Coin (Random Date)

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1 oz American Eagle Palladium Coin (Random Date)

The 1 oz American Palladium Eagle is a .9995 palladium bullion 1-ounce coin issued by the United States government with a $25 face value and is a legal tender coin of the United States government.

Palladium Eagle is the official palladium bullion coin of the USA. The $25 face value each coin is made of 99.95% pure palladium and contains 1 troy ounce of palladium actual weight. It is authorized by the American Eagle Palladium Bullion Coin Act of 2010 signed by the president Barack Obama.

Palladium Eagles are the only U.S. government-issued palladium coins, and they are made from classic palladium designs by numismatic legend Adolph Weinman, are guaranteed by the U.S. government to be 99.95% pure palladium and contain the same amount of metal as stated, and have been released as collectible coins.

The random date format will give you a real U.S. Mint Palladium Eagle from today's BOLD stock, which year is at BOLD's discretion. With the rarity of coins in some mintage years, buying a random year Palladium Eagles will have the lowest premiums. The random date format offers the highest value to palladium investors who are more interested in the content of the metal than in the specific year date.

BOLD Precious Metals purchases all U.S. Mint palladium coins from channels of authorized dealers. All coins are shipped in a protective capsule.

The Design: Adolph Weinman's Masterwork on Palladium

The Design: Adolph Weinman's Masterwork on Palladium, is a collection of beautiful designs, featuring 164 designs in total.

Many numismatists agree that the American Palladium Eagle has the best coin designs both front and back, both of which were created by the same artist, Adolph A. Weinman, who worked in American numismatic tradition for 100 years.

Obverse: Winged Liberty (Mercury Dime Design)

The coins' obverse uses Adolph Weinman's design of the Winged Liberty Head "Mercury" dime, which was minted from 1916 to 1945. It portrays the Goddess of Liberty wearing a winged hat.

The high-relief image of Lady Liberty wears freedom of thought on her headpiece. These inscriptions, framed by the year of minting include “LIBERTY,” “IN GOD WE TRUST,” and the artist's initials.

Weinman selected a fasces-topped Phrygian cap, traditionally associated with the Roman god of communication and travel, Mercury, to represent the freedom of thought that the artist was looking to incorporate into his painting. The Mercury Dime is one of the most beautiful coin designs in U.S. history, according to the American Numismatic Association.

Reverse: The Eagle with Branch (1907 AIA Medal Design)

On the reverse, the Eagle with Branch, a design that won the AIA Medal in 1907. The Palladium Eagle's reverse design is a copy of the design for the American Institute of Architects medal from 1907 by Weinman.

On the obverse side is a determined eagle that is making the effort to pull a branch from a rock with its beak while on the backside is shown the metal, purity and face value. The inscriptions were: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA $25 1 OZ. Pd .9995 FINE E PLURIBUS UNUM.

Production History & Rarity

The Palladium Eagle's mintage history is entirely unique among U.S. Mint bullion coins, with extreme annual supply (scarcity) and a fixed, rotating finish schedule.

The original 1917 coin is an uncirculated coin. The 2018-W and the 2019-W and 2022-W are proof and reverse proof coins respectively. The 2020-W and 2023-W coins were struck as burnished uncirculated while the 2021 dated coins were struck in both uncirculated and proof. The demand was popular, however, even though the maximum mintage for one year was 30,000 coins, none of the years' mintage rose above 15,000 coins. The average mintage is slightly below 15,000 per year.

Through the first year only 78,771 coins have been produced in all. Silver Eagles are produced by the U.S. Mint in millions each year, for comparison. A single truck would carry just 1% of the total cumulative sales of Palladium Eagles from all years sold.

So far, it has released only bullion Palladium Eagles in 2017 and 2021. The Mint, while it has the legal rights to produce bullion versions again, has not, as yet, announced any plans to produce bullion versions, but has concentrated its efforts on the collector versions sold directly to the public.

IRA Eligibility

The American Palladium Eagle can be used for Precious Metals IRAs. The .9995 fine palladium purity is the minimum standard that the IRS requires for palladium in a Self-Directed Precious Metals IRA. Being a U.S. government sovereign coin, it meets all institutional quality standards of IRA custodians. Check with your custodian on the specific products you want to buy.

How It Compares

1 oz American Palladium Eagle — Random Date (this coin)

The only U.S. government sovereign palladium coin. .9995 fine palladium. $25 USD legal tender. Liberty engraved on the obverse and AIA eagle on the reverse in high relief by Adolph Weinman. Only a total of less than 79,000 coins have been minted over the years. IRA-eligible. The most widely circulated palladium coin on the U.S. market, with U.S. sovereignty backing and the lowest premium in the Palladium Eagle format, it's best for palladium investors who wish their holdings are backed by U.S. sovereignty.

Specifically engraved with a "Year American Palladium Eagle" on one side and a "Proof" or "Reverse Proof" on the other.

Same coin, year date and finish. The higher premium is due to the collector demand for the specific year. The random date is better for palladium investors wanting to get the lowest premium for owning sovereign U.S. palladium, while the better finish rotation year is better for numismatists.

1 oz PAMP Suisse Palladium Bar

Swiss LBMA-accredited .9995 palladium. CertiPAMP assay card. Bar instead of coin. Lower premium than the Palladium Eagle's. The Palladium Eagle is better for investors who want U.S. sovereign backing and coin format while the Palladium is better for investors who want palladium at the lowest possible premium in a named brand bar.

Palladium is a precious metal that is found in rocks, soils, and sediments.Palladium is a precious metal that occurs in rocks, soils, and sediments.

Cheapest palladium price. No backing from a sovereign, no design premium. For pure palladium collection at the lowest price, the Palladium Eagle is better; the Palladium Eagle is better for those who prefer the U.S. government guarantee and the most widely recognized palladium coin on the secondary market.

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