The United States is celebrating its 250th birthday in 2026! This is called the Semiquincentennial. To mark this big event, the U.S. Mint made special coins with new looks for just one year. These coins are not just money – they tell the story of America’s history, freedom, and important people and events.
These coins started coming out in early 2026. Many have the special dates “1776 ~ 2026” on them. The designs focus on key moments like the early settlers, the Revolutionary War, the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and even the Gettysburg Address.



What the Coins Look Like
Here is a simple table of the main 2026 anniversary coins and their designs:
| Coin Type | Main Design Features | What It Means | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Penny (1 cent) | Lincoln on front, shield on back, with “1776 ~ 2026” dates | Shows America’s ongoing story | Only for collectors, not in everyday change |
| Nickel (5 cents) | Thomas Jefferson on front, Monticello on back, with special dates | Honors a founding father | Circulates normally |
| Dime (10 cents) | Lady Liberty on front, flying eagle on back | Symbol of freedom | First big change in 80 years |
| Quarter (25 cents) | Five different designs: Mayflower Compact, Revolutionary War, Declaration of Independence, U.S. Constitution, Gettysburg Address | Key events in U.S. history | Five versions to collect! |
| Half Dollar (50 cents) | Statue of Liberty, passing a torch | Liberty and knowledge for the future | Mostly for collectors |
These designs were revealed in December 2025 and started circulating in January 2026.


Fun and Interesting Stories
These new coins remind people of the 200th anniversary (Bicentennial) coins from 1976. Back then, America went crazy with celebration! The quarter had a drummer boy from the Revolutionary War on the back. Everything was branded “Bicentennial” – from soda cans to cars. There were huge parades with tall ships in New York harbor that millions watched.
Some 1976 quarters had rare mistakes in how they were made. Those error coins now sell for a lot of money – one even went for millions at auction! A collector once found a valuable one in family coins and got rich.
The 1976 celebration was full of patriotism and fun. Maybe the 250th will be the same – with big events and people hunting for special versions of these new coins.


Another cool part: One coin highlights Polly Cooper and the Oneida Nation, who helped George Washington’s army during the hard winter at Valley Forge. It shows how Native Americans played a big role in history.
There was some debate too – some wanted designs with civil rights leaders like Frederick Douglass, but those weren’t chosen.



