As the official silver bullion coin of the United States, the American Silver Eagle stands as the world's most sought-after silver investment. BOLD Precious Metals is your trusted, authorized source for a complete selection of Silver Eagles.


1 oz 1986 America Silver Eagle (NGC MS69)
Out of Stock


2025 1 oz American Eagle Silver Coin (BU)
Out of Stock


1 oz American Silver Eagle (BU, Random, Type 2)
Out of Stock


2002 1 oz American Eagle Silver Coin (BU)
Out of Stock


2001 1 oz American Eagle Silver Coin (BU)
Out of Stock


2024 1 oz American Eagle Silver Coin (BU)
Out of Stock


2023 1 oz American Eagle Silver Coin BU
Out of Stock
Authorized by the Liberty Coin Act of 1985; first struck at West Point.
Demand has never dipped below 4 million coins in any calendar year.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Composition | .999 Fine Silver |
| Weight | 1 Troy Ounce (31.103g) |
| Diameter | 40.6 mm |
| Thickness | 2.98 mm |
| Face Value | $1 USD - U.S. Government Backed |
| IRA Eligible | Yes - meets IRS .999 fineness minimum |
| Mint Facilities | West Point (primary), San Francisco, Philadelphia |
| Current Design Series | Type 2 (2021–Present) |
| Obverse Design | Walking Liberty - Adolph Weinman, 1916 original |
| Type 2 Reverse Design | Landing Eagle on Oak Branch - Emily Damstra |
In 2021, the U.S. Mint introduced the Type 2 reverse - a bald eagle landing on an oak branch, designed by Emily Damstra - replacing John Mercanti's heraldic eagle that had appeared on every Silver Eagle since 1986. This was the most significant design change in the coin's 35-year history, and it added something bullion buyers genuinely care about: an anti-counterfeit edge notch.
What Is the "Missing Reed"?
The Type 2 coin features a deliberate interruption in the reeded edge - known in the industry as the "Missing Reed." This anti-counterfeit feature is extremely difficult to replicate on counterfeit strikes, giving buyers and dealers a fast, reliable authenticity check without specialized equipment.
Dealer Insight - Ryan Cochran
Don't write off Type 1 Eagles as obsolete. The 2020-dated BU Eagle - the last year of the Mercanti reverse - has already begun pulling a modest collector premium in the secondary market, and I expect that to widen over the next 5–10 years as the Type 1/Type 2 split becomes more widely understood. If you're stacking for investment, buy Type 2 for the anti-counterfeit advantage. If you're building a date run, 2019 and 2020 BU Eagles are worth picking up now while premiums are still modest.
| Feature | Type 1 (1986–2020) | Type 2 (2021–Present) |
|---|---|---|
| Reverse Design | Heraldic Eagle - John Mercanti | Landing Eagle on Oak Branch - Emily Damstra |
| Anti-Counterfeit Edge | No | Yes - "Missing Reed" notch |
| Collector Premium Trajectory | Growing on key dates and final-year issues | Standard modern stacking premium |
| Availability at BOLD | Secondary market; select dates available | In stock - BU, Proof, and Burnished |
| Best For | Collectors building date sets; secondary market buyers | Investors, IRA buyers, bulk stackers |
This is the question I hear most from first-time buyers, and the answer depends entirely on what you're trying to accomplish. Here's the honest breakdown - no upsell, just the data.
| Feature | Brilliant Uncirculated (BU) | Proof | Burnished (Uncirculated) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strike Method | High-speed production press | Multi-strike on polished planchet | Single-strike on hand-fed, burnished planchet |
| Finish | Brilliant, standard | Mirror field, frosted cameo design | Satin/matte - distinctive look |
| Premium Over Spot | Lowest - $3–$5/oz | Highest - $10–$30+ | Moderate |
| Mintage Volume | High - millions per year | Limited - hundreds of thousands | Very limited - often under 500,000 |
| Original Mint Packaging | Tube of 20 or Monster Box of 500 | Velvet box with Certificate of Authenticity | Velvet presentation case |
| IRA Eligible | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Best For | Investors, bulk stackers, IRA purchases | Collectors, gift buyers, long-term holds | Selective collectors, low-mintage hunters |
Ryan's Verdict
For pure silver investment — especially buying tubes or Monster Boxes — BU is the move. Best per-ounce economics, maximum liquidity, zero collector-premium risk on resale. For a gift or year-set collection, go with the current-year Proof. And if you're a serious collector with a contrarian streak: the Burnished series (issued since 2006, skipped entirely in 2009 and 2010) is still undervalued relative to Proofs in my opinion.
The vast majority of Silver Eagles trade at spot plus a standard premium. But there's a short list of dates where mintage figures, design variants, or distribution anomalies create lasting collector value well above bullion price. Know these before you buy — or sell.
| Year / Variety | Mintage | Why It Commands a Premium |
|---|---|---|
| 1986 BU Inaugural | 5.4 million | First-year issue; strong symbolic demand from date-set collectors |
| 1994 BU Key Date | 4.2 million | Lowest BU mintage in the entire series — the hardest date to find in original rolls |
| 1995-W Proof Rarest | 30,125 | West Point Proof, originally only in a 10th Anniversary 5-coin set; one of the rarest modern U.S. silver coins |
| 2008-W Burnished | 533,000 | Low production in the Burnished series; consistently sought by type-set collectors |
| 2019-S Enhanced Reverse Proof 30K Hard Cap | 30,000 | Already trading at multiples of face on the secondary market |
| 2020 BU - Final Type 1 | 30 million | Last year of the Mercanti reverse; collector premium building as Type 1/Type 2 distinction grows |
| 2021-W Type 1 Proof Transitional | Limited | Final Proof with the original reverse; Type 1 and Type 2 Proofs both released in the same year — a once-in-35-years event |
Overlooked Fact
The 1994 BU Silver Eagle has the lowest mintage of any non-West Point BU issue in the series at approximately 4.2 million coins — yet it consistently trades at only a modest premium over spot because most buyers aren't aware of it. That disparity between scarcity and market price won't last indefinitely.
The Silver Eagle carries a higher premium over spot than most competing silver coins. Here's whether that premium is justified — and in most cases for investors, it is.
| Coin | Typical Premium | IRA Eligible | Govt. Backed | Anti-Counterfeit | U.S. Resale Liquidity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| American Silver Eagle | $3–$6/oz | Yes | U.S. Mint | Type 2 Missing Reed | Highest |
| Canadian Silver Maple Leaf | $2–$4/oz | Yes | Royal Canadian Mint | Radial lines + micro-engraving | High |
| Austrian Silver Philharmonic | $2–$4/oz | Yes | Austrian Mint | Limited | Moderate |
| Generic 1 oz Silver Round | $1–$2/oz | Most do not | No | None | Lower - brand-dependent |
Dealer Verdict
For U.S.-based investors, Silver Eagles are worth the premium over generics based on resale liquidity alone. When silver prices move fast and you need to sell quickly, Eagles move first — dealers and secondary buyers always prefer them because they don't need to verify purity on the spot. The Canadian Maple Leaf is the closest competitor and a legitimate alternative for buyers who want to minimize premium, but for IRA accounts and domestic resale, Eagles are my default recommendation.
Silver Eagles are among the very few silver coins approved by the IRS for inclusion in a Self-Directed Precious Metals IRA. The IRS requires a minimum fineness of .999 for silver held in a retirement account — Silver Eagles meet that standard exactly. Notably, Proof Silver Eagles are also IRA-eligible — which is unusual, as most Proof coins do not qualify.
Silver Eagles meet the IRS minimum exactly. Both BU and Proof variants qualify.
Your specific coins are kept separate from other clients' holdings at an IRS-approved depository.
Tax Advantages
Gains are tax-deferred in a Traditional IRA or potentially tax-free in a Roth IRA structure. BOLD works directly with leading IRA custodians to make rollovers from existing 401(k) or Traditional IRA accounts straightforward.
Evaluating a Silver Eagle IRA? Visit our IRA page for a no-obligation walkthrough of the transfer process, eligible products, and depository options.
Authorized Purchaser
We source BU Silver Eagles directly from the U.S. Mint. Your coins arrive in original Mint packaging — not repackaged secondary-market material.
Low Premiums
We run a high-volume, low-margin operation. Our Eagle premiums are consistently among the lowest in the market — compare the live price widget above against any competitor.
Free Shipping on Orders $199+
Fully insured, tamper-evident packaging on every shipment. Orders placed before 2PM EST ship the same business day.
Monster Box Availability
We regularly stock full 500-coin Monster Boxes for bulk investors — the best per-coin price in our catalog.
Active Buyback Program
The same Eagles we sell you, we'll buy back when you're ready to liquidate. No runaround, no delays.
IRA Integration
Full support for Silver Eagle IRA purchases, transfers, and rollover coordination with approved custodians.
The price of a Silver Eagle is the spot price of silver plus a dealer premium. The live price is displayed in the product grid above and updates in real time during market hours. BOLD's premiums on BU Silver Eagles typically range from $3–$6 over spot, depending on quantity and current inventory levels.
Silver Eagles offer a combination of government backing, IRA eligibility, and market liquidity that few silver products match. For investors who prioritize resale ease and domestic market recognition, they remain the strongest single-coin silver investment available. The Type 2 anti-counterfeit edge feature introduced in 2021 further strengthens their long-term credibility.
A standard Silver Eagle tube contains 20 coins. A full Monster Box contains 25 tubes — 500 coins total — and is the most cost-efficient way to buy Silver Eagles in bulk. Shop Monster Boxes at BOLD.
Brilliant Uncirculated (BU) Eagles are mass-produced on high-speed presses and carry the lowest premium over spot — ideal for investors. Proof Eagles are struck multiple times on polished planchets, producing a mirror-like background with a frosted design. They come in U.S. Mint packaging with a Certificate of Authenticity and carry a higher premium. Both are IRA-eligible.
Yes. American Silver Eagles — both BU and Proof — meet the IRS .999 fineness requirement for Self-Directed Precious Metals IRAs. BOLD works with approved custodians to facilitate IRA purchases and rollovers. Learn more about Silver Eagle IRAs.
Silver Eagles are the most liquid silver coin in the U.S. market. Every major dealer, coin shop, and pawn shop recognizes and buys them on sight. BOLD maintains an active buyback program for the Eagles we sell.
The Type 2 Silver Eagle (2021–present) features a deliberate interruption in the reeded edge — a gap known as the "Missing Reed." This anti-counterfeit feature is extremely difficult to replicate and provides a fast, reliable authenticity check without specialized equipment.
BU Silver Eagles typically carry a $3–$6 premium over spot per ounce — higher than generic silver rounds ($1–$2) and slightly above Canadian Maple Leafs ($2–$4). For domestic U.S. investors, the premium difference is justified by superior resale liquidity and universal dealer recognition.