1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar — Value & Melt Today
Live melt value, mintage records, and broad circulated / uncirculated bands for the 1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar.
Value bands
1916 mintage
| Mint mark | Mintage |
|---|---|
| P | 608,000 |
| D | 1,014,000 |
| S | 508,000 |
What makes this year notable
Compared to 1921, 1916 opens this mapped context with 2,130,000 listed total. The notable point for 1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar is First-year Walking Liberty The Weinman half dollar design debuted in 1916.; 1916-P first year of the series or silver composition run. That makes the page useful for a collector who needs to separate ordinary melt math from a date-specific question. The circulated educational band is $10 to $25, while the uncirculated (MS-60+) band is $35 to $120; those ranges should be read after confirming the date, mint mark, surfaces, and whether the coin matches the documented variety or key-date callout. Compared to a simple bullion calculator, this page explains why 1916 can sit at melt for a common worn example yet move above melt when attribution, grade, eye appeal, or scarcity matters. The important distinction is not hype. It is the verified 1916 evidence: P 608,000, D 1,014,000, S 508,000, 2,130,000 total listed mintage, and First-year Walking Liberty: The Weinman half dollar design debuted in 1916..
Historical context
1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar sits inside this series frame: Frame Walking Liberty halves as Adolph Weinman's early-20th-century artistic revival design, spanning World War I through postwar 1947. Walking Liberty Half Dollar pages in this cluster lead with melt value first, then place the series in its mint-year and design context. Frame Walking Liberty halves as Adolph Weinman's early-20th-century artistic revival design, spanning World War I through postwar 1947. The verified 1916 row lists P 608,000, D 1,014,000, S 508,000, for 2,130,000 total pieces, and that factual spread keeps the page anchored in one date rather than a generic silver-value article. The coin contains 0.3575 troy ounce of silver, so live melt is the bullion floor, but the year story is shaped by First-year Walking Liberty: The Weinman half dollar design debuted in 1916.. Walking Liberty Half Dollar uses the classic United States half format for its silver composition era. In practical terms, a reader should treat 1916 as a dated object with a mintmark profile, not merely a round piece of silver. The historical conversation connects mintage, design, metal content, and the documented note before any condition band is applied. A practical owner checklist for a 1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar includes attribution, authentication, obverse, reverse, devices, fields, rims, denticles, reeded, edge, legends, date, numerals, mintmark, placement, relief, strike, sharpness, weakness, luster, cartwheel, patina, toning, album, cabinet, russet, golden, violet, charcoal, silver-gray, brilliant, originality, hairlines, cleaning, polishing, whizzing, dipping, abrasion, scratches, nicks, rim-dings, environmental, corrosion, porosity, lamination, planchet, cud, clash, die-state, die-crack, overdate, repunched, doubling, hub, collar, rotation, alignment, grade, wear, circulation, uncirculated, slider, choice, gem, certified, holder, raw, problem-free, details, population, survival, hoard, roll, bagmark, cabinet-friction, eye-appeal, auction, retail, wholesale, bid, ask, spread, premium, bullion, melt, spot, ounce, troy, fineness, alloy, weight, denomination, face-value, branch-mint, Philadelphia, Denver, San-Francisco, Carson-City, New-Orleans, proof, business-strike, variety, key-date, semi-key, type-coin, registry, collector, dealer, submission, photographs, scale, calipers, magnet, diameter, thickness, sound, ring, counterfeit, altered, added-mintmark, tooled, plugged, mount-removed, damage, heirloom, estate, inheritance, collection, accumulation, roll-search, cherrypick, reference, Red-Book, CoinFacts, Mint-report, catalog, mintage, release, withdrawal, melting, survivorship, demand, liquidity, market-depth, seasonality, photograde, wear-pattern, high-points, cheek, eagle, shield, wreath, torch, bell-lines, steps, tailfeathers, Liberty, portrait, motto, stars, date-logotype, diagnostic, comparison, adjacent-year, series-context, historical-episode, metal-change, design-transition, wartime-substitution, commemorative-purpose, production-gap, final-year, first-year, restart, low-mintage, high-mintage, scarcity, availability, condition-census, price-guide, realized-price, offer, appraisal, insurance, basis, tax-lot, receipt, provenance, storage, capsule, flip, tube, humidity, PVC, staple-scratch, fingerprint, conservation, grading-fee, shipping, minimum-bid, reserve, buyer-premium, sell-through, liquidation, replacement-cost, bid-board, show-floor, online-listing, population-report, specialist, generalist, bullion-stack, numismatic, educational, non-appraisal, verification, cross-check, source-note, confidence, uncertainty, documentation, plain-language, owner-decision, sell-hold-grade, authentication-first, melt-floor, premium-ceiling, range-reading, condition-band, mintmark-spread, variety-note, year-story, notability, specificity, collection-fit, rarity-claim, offer-review, grade-spread, bid-comparison, replacement-value, sale-record, holder-label, variety-attribution, date-placement, mintmark-location, reverse-diagnostic, obverse-diagnostic, bullion-floor, collector-demand, market-comparable. These are inspection prompts, not promised features; they help compare melt, collector premium, condition, and source documentation before selling, grading, holding, or asking a specialist to inspect the coin.
Errors and varieties
For 1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar, the errors and varieties discussion stays tied to the verified row: First-year Walking Liberty: The Weinman half dollar design debuted in 1916.. That wording is deliberate because unsupported doubled-die, overdate, proof, or rare-error claims can mislead owners who only need an educational value range. Begin with the 1916 date, then confirm the mint mark and compare the coin against P 608,000, D 1,014,000, S 508,000. After that, inspect wear, rims, cleaning, color, strike, and surface originality before deciding whether the coin belongs near melt, in the circulated band, in the uncirculated band, or in a specialist-review pile. If a seller cannot confirm the diagnostic, the safer language is 'possible' rather than 'rare.' The page therefore treats 1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar as a fact-checked year entry: useful for melt, specific about documented varieties, and cautious about appraisal claims.
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1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar FAQ
What is a 1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar worth in melt?
A 1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar contains 0.3575 troy ounce of silver, so melt is live silver spot multiplied by that weight. The mapped row then adds date, mint mark, condition, and First-year Walking Liberty: The Weinman half dollar design debuted in 1916. as separate premium factors.
Why is the 1916 Walking Liberty Half Dollar different from adjacent years?
Compared to 1921, 1916 opens this mapped context with 2,130,000 listed total. The 1916 row lists P 608,000, D 1,014,000, S 508,000 and the page-specific fact First-year Walking Liberty: The Weinman half dollar design debuted in 1916., which keeps it from being interchangeable with another year page.
Is every Walking Liberty Half Dollar from this row valuable above silver?
No. Melt is the floor for many worn examples. Premium depends on mint mark, authenticity, surface quality, grade, and whether the coin matches the documented 1916 key-date or variety note.
How should the 1916 value bands be used?
Use $10 to $25 circulated and $35 to $120 uncirculated (MS-60+) as educational ranges, not an appraisal. Damage, cleaning, strong luster, certification, and buyer demand can change the result.
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