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  1. Collectibles
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  4. $5 Liberty Half Eagles

$5 Liberty Half Eagles overview

The $5 Liberty Head Half Eagle is one of the longest-running gold coin series in United States Mint history, struck continuously from 1839 through 1908. Designed by Christian Gobrecht and later refined by James Longacre, the obverse features a coronet-crowned portrait of Liberty, while the reverse displays a heraldicโ€ฆ

Updated June 2026

$5 Liberty Half Eagles

The $5 Liberty Head Half Eagle is one of the longest-running gold coin series in United States Mint history, struck continuously from 1839 through 1908. Designed by Christian Gobrecht and later refined by James Longacre, the obverse features a coronet-crowned portrait of Liberty, while the reverse displays a heraldic eagle. The denomination โ€” five dollars in .900 fine gold โ€” made the Half Eagle a workhorse of 19th-century American commerce, produced across multiple branch mints including Philadelphia, New Orleans, Carson City, San Francisco, and Denver. Within numismatics, $5 Liberty Half Eagles occupy a central place in classic U.S. gold coinage. The series spans dozens of date-and-mintmark combinations, ranging from readily available issues to legitimately scarce branch-mint strikes. Most surviving examples grade in the Very Fine to Extremely Fine range, reflecting genuine circulation, while true Mint State (MS) specimens represent a smaller portion of the market. Collectors pursue the series by date, mintmark, or grade โ€” and a complete set by date and mint is considered one of the landmark achievements in pre-1933 gold collecting. On CoinDuffle, this category brings together $5 Liberty Half Eagles from multiple professional dealers, spanning a wide range of dates, mintmarks, and grades. Listings include circulated examples in grades from Fine through AU, as well as uncirculated and proof issues where available. Both raw and third-party certified (PCGS, NGC) coins appear across the inventory, making this page a broad resource for collectors building date sets, type collections, or simply seeking a specific issue.

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1908 Liberty Head Half Eagle $5 Gold NGC MS62 - $5 Liberty Half Eagles from Lone Star Coins
1908 Liberty Head Half Eagle $5 Gold NGC MS62 - Alternate view
Only 1 left

1908 Liberty Head Half Eagle $5 Gold NGC MS62

Starting at

$1,269.49

+28.20%
SKU: NGC-3376141-017
Lone Star Coins
1901-S Liberty Head Half Eagle $5 Gold NGC MS63 - $5 Liberty Half Eagles from Lone Star Coins
1901-S Liberty Head Half Eagle $5 Gold NGC MS63 - Alternate view
Only 1 left

1901-S Liberty Head Half Eagle $5 Gold NGC MS63

Starting at

$1,269.49

+28.20%
SKU: NGC-502493-015
Lone Star Coins
1901-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS63 - $5 Liberty Half Eagles from Lone Star Coins
1901-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS63 - Alternate view
Only 1 left

1901-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS63

Starting at

$1,269.49

+28.20%
SKU: PCGS-46678537
Lone Star Coins
1900-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS63 - $5 Liberty Half Eagles from Lone Star Coins
1900-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS63 - Alternate view
Only 1 left

1900-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS63

Starting at

$1,269.49

+28.20%
SKU: PCGS-46642402
Lone Star Coins
1899-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS62 - $5 Liberty Half Eagles from Lone Star Coins
1899-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS62 - Alternate view
Only 1 left

1899-P $5 Gold Half Eagle PCGS MS62

Starting at

$1,269.49

+28.20%
SKU: PCGS-46423800
Lone Star Coins

About $5 Liberty Half Eagles

The $5 Liberty Head Half Eagle is one of the longest-running gold coin series in United States Mint history, struck continuously from 1839 through 1908. Designed by Christian Gobrecht and later refined by James Longacre, the obverse features a coronet-crowned portrait of Liberty, while the reverse displays a heraldic eagle. The denomination โ€” five dollars in .900 fine gold โ€” made the Half Eagle a workhorse of 19th-century American commerce, produced across multiple branch mints including Philadelphia, New Orleans, Carson City, San Francisco, and Denver.

Within numismatics, $5 Liberty Half Eagles occupy a central place in classic U.S. gold coinage. The series spans dozens of date-and-mintmark combinations, ranging from readily available issues to legitimately scarce branch-mint strikes. Most surviving examples grade in the Very Fine to Extremely Fine range, reflecting genuine circulation, while true Mint State (MS) specimens represent a smaller portion of the market. Collectors pursue the series by date, mintmark, or grade โ€” and a complete set by date and mint is considered one of the landmark achievements in pre-1933 gold collecting.

On CoinDuffle, this category brings together $5 Liberty Half Eagles from multiple professional dealers, spanning a wide range of dates, mintmarks, and grades. Listings include circulated examples in grades from Fine through AU, as well as uncirculated and proof issues where available. Both raw and third-party certified (PCGS, NGC) coins appear across the inventory, making this page a broad resource for collectors building date sets, type collections, or simply seeking a specific issue.

Frequently asked questions

A $5 Liberty Half Eagle is a U.S. gold coin struck from 1839 to 1908, containing .900 fine gold in a denomination of five dollars. The obverse features a coronet-crowned Liberty head designed by Christian Gobrecht and James Longacre, and the reverse shows a heraldic eagle. It is one of the most historically significant series in 19th-century American coinage and a cornerstone of classic U.S. gold collecting.
Half Eagles of this type were produced at five U.S. Mint facilities: Philadelphia (no mintmark), New Orleans (O), Carson City (CC), San Francisco (S), and Denver (D). Branch-mint issues often carry premiums due to lower surviving populations, and Carson City Half Eagles in particular are widely collected for their frontier-era significance. The mintmark, when present, appears on the reverse below the eagle.
Because these coins circulated actively in 19th-century commerce, the majority of surviving examples grade in the Very Fine (VF-20 to VF-35) through Extremely Fine (EF-40 to EF-45) range. About Uncirculated (AU) coins are available but less common, and true Mint State (MS-60 and above) examples are relatively scarce for most date-and-mint combinations.
Both are $5 gold coins, but they represent distinct design eras. The Liberty Head series ran from 1839 to 1908 and features a coronet portrait of Liberty. The Indian Head series, designed by Bela Lyon Pratt, was struck from 1908 to 1929 and is notable for its incuse (sunken-relief) design. The two types are collected separately and differ substantially in appearance, mintage history, and available date sets.
Yes. The Philadelphia Mint produced proof $5 Liberty Half Eagles for most years in the series, primarily intended for collectors rather than circulation. Proof mintages were typically very small โ€” often just a few dozen to a few hundred coins per year โ€” making proof examples considerably scarcer than their business-strike counterparts. Proof Half Eagles are distinguished by their mirrored fields and sharp, fully struck devices.

Explore related categories

Browse Pre-1933 US Gold CoinsShop $20 Saint-Gaudens Double EaglesShop $20 Liberty Double EaglesShop $10 Indian EaglesShop $10 Liberty EaglesShop $5 Indian Half EaglesShop $2.5 Indian Quarter EaglesShop $2.5 Liberty Quarter EaglesShop $1 Liberty Gold Dollars (Type 1)

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Premiums vs spot

See live pricing tied to spot and compare fixed-price and dynamic offers. Higher-demand items can carry larger premiums; check weights, fineness, and mintage before you buy.

Graded vs. raw coins: which should you buy?

Comparison of certified (graded) and raw $5 liberty half eagles
FactorCertified / graded (PCGS, NGC)Raw / uncertified
AuthenticationThird-party verified and sealed in a tamper-evident holderAssessed by the buyer or dealer
LiquidityHigher โ€” the grade is a standardized, trusted referenceVaries with buyer confidence and condition
Typical premiumHigher (covers grading cost and assurance)Lower โ€” closer to melt or bullion value
Best forNumismatic value and resale confidenceStacking by weight at the lowest cost

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