Palladium bullion encompasses coins, rounds, and bars struck or cast in .9995 fine palladium, one of the platinum-group metals (PGMs). As one of the rarest and most industrially significant precious metals, palladium occupies a distinct niche within the broader bullion market. Common formats include 1 troy oz coins and bars, though fractional and multi-ounce options appear in certain series and from select private mints. The most widely recognized palladium coin in numismatics is the American Palladium Eagle, authorized by the U.S. Mint and struck in .9995 fine palladium. Its obverse draws from Adolph A. Weinman's "Winged Liberty" Mercury dime design, while the reverse adapts his 1907 American Institute of Architects medal — a pairing that gives the series a distinctive place in U.S. coinage history. Other notable sovereign palladium issues have come from Canada (the Palladium Maple Leaf series) and Russia (the Ballerina series, produced through the 1990s), alongside various private-mint bars and rounds. Because palladium has historically been produced in smaller mintages than gold or silver, many issues carry meaningful collector premiums above melt. On CoinDuffle, the Palladium category brings together listings from multiple vetted dealers, spanning sovereign mint coins, private-mint rounds, and cast or minted bars across a range of years and formats. Buyers will find both BU (brilliant uncirculated) and proof-finish pieces, as well as sealed assay packaging from major refiners. Whether the focus is on a specific sovereign series or on accumulating palladium by troy ounce weight, this page aggregates the inventory currently available across the marketplace.
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Palladium bullion encompasses coins, rounds, and bars struck or cast in .9995 fine palladium, one of the platinum-group metals (PGMs). As one of the rarest and most industrially significant precious metals, palladium occupies a distinct niche within the broader bullion market. Common formats include 1 troy oz coins and bars, though fractional and multi-ounce options appear in certain series and from select private mints.
The most widely recognized palladium coin in numismatics is the American Palladium Eagle, authorized by the U.S. Mint and struck in .9995 fine palladium. Its obverse draws from Adolph A. Weinman's "Winged Liberty" Mercury dime design, while the reverse adapts his 1907 American Institute of Architects medal — a pairing that gives the series a distinctive place in U.S. coinage history. Other notable sovereign palladium issues have come from Canada (the Palladium Maple Leaf series) and Russia (the Ballerina series, produced through the 1990s), alongside various private-mint bars and rounds. Because palladium has historically been produced in smaller mintages than gold or silver, many issues carry meaningful collector premiums above melt.
On CoinDuffle, the Palladium category brings together listings from multiple vetted dealers, spanning sovereign mint coins, private-mint rounds, and cast or minted bars across a range of years and formats. Buyers will find both BU (brilliant uncirculated) and proof-finish pieces, as well as sealed assay packaging from major refiners. Whether the focus is on a specific sovereign series or on accumulating palladium by troy ounce weight, this page aggregates the inventory currently available across the marketplace.
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