The Search for W-Mint Mark Quarter Errors


To foster coin collecting, the U.S. Mint released 10 million W-mint mark quarters in 2019 and 2020, the first time the West Point facility had been used to make circulating coinage. The low-mintage represented a mere 1% of all quarters produced in those years, raising interest in the hobby along with values, especially since the Mint mixed Denver and Philadelphia issues in bulk bags sent to banks.

Ergo, you can still find these desired coins in pocket change, although after so many years the they typically will have been circulated, in lower grades due to wear. Typically they sell for below $50. But if you can find any of these W-mint mark America the Beautiful quarters with mint errors, values increase dramatically.

Errors are scarce in this series because the Mint wanted to ensure that these special issues were as pristine as possible. The lack of major errors, such as mules or double dies, has spiked values for otherwise common or slight design deviations.

This article discusses how to identify discovered–and yet to be discovered–errors in the series.

These are the five 2019-W quarter designs:

  • Lowell National Historical Park in Massachusetts
  • American Memorial Park in the Northern Mariana Islands
  • War in the Pacific National Historical Park in Guam
  • San Antonio Missions National Historical Park in Texas
  • Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness in Idaho

These are the five 2020-W quarter designed, which also contain a privy mark celebrating the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II.

  • National Park of American Samoa in the U.S. territory of American Samoa
  • Weir Farm National Historic Site located in the state of Connecticut
  • Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve in the U.S. Virgin Islands territory,
  • Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park in Vermont
  • Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Kansas

Struck through coins are the most frequent error in W-mint mark quarters. This occurs when a clogged die strikes the planchet with a mixture of lubricant and metal dust.

Here is an example from eBay:


The 2020 American Samoa Quarter features a fruit bat, with the mother bat hanging upside down holding her offspring. Here’s the official design:

A dramatic error exists with the Samoa quarter. A strike-through occurred on multiple coins, obscuring part or all of the mother bat’s face.

Here’s a PCGS example:


This raw version was offered on eBay:


There are other less dramatic examples of the struck-through error, such as the obverse of the coin below, which would have been a low-value mistake had it not occurred on a W-mint mark quarter:


To help you discover the various possible mint errors, see this illustrated coin glossary, from which these examples have been taken. Again, keep in mind, that many of these errors have not been discovered but are theoretically possible. Click the glossary link above to see visual depictions:

BROAD STRUCK: A minting error resulting in a coin outside its collar.
CLIPPED: A planchet missing part of its design when the blank in question was improperly punched
CUD: A flaw that raises metal near the collar or edge, caused by a damaged die at the mint.
DIE CHIP: A small piece of metal not part of the original design comes into contact with the metal dies.
DIE CRACK: A defective line caused by a faulty die.
DOUBLING: Also known as hub doubling and double die, a coin that underwent a bounce on the die, leaving two images on the surface, as opposed to machine doubling caused by a loose die with little numismatic value. (See HUB DOUBLING, MACHINE DOUBLING.)
LAMINATION ERROR: A portion of a coin’s planchet due to impurities of the planchet.
MISALIGNED COLLAR: A strike in which the die does not square up perfectly with obverse or reverse, resulting in a partial collar or mint error, usually not very valuable. (See COLLAR.)
MULE: A coin whose obverse and reverse are meant for different coins. The quarter below has a dollar reverse.
MISSING MINT MARK: Because there was only one mint in Philadelphia in the early 19th Century, no mint mark was used. However, the “P” mint mark appears on coins from 1942-1945. Beginning in1980 all of Philadelphia’s coins (except cent) have the “P” mint mark. The W-mint mark was used on America the Beautiful quarters in 2019 and 2020.
REPUNCHED: A variety of a coin whose date or mintmark seems double struck.
STRUCK THROUGH GREASE: A clogged die that strikes with a mixture of lubricant and metal dust.

Here is an eBay example of a clipped W-mint mark quarter:


You’ll notice that the above clip appears on the American Samoa quarter–the same with the struck-through faceless or blind mother bat. Imagine the desirability of this coin containing both errors! Theoretically, it could exist. So can other W-mint mark quarters with multiple errors.

That said, be especially wary about bidding or buying raw error coins in the W-mint mark series. For instance, unscrupulous sellers can use a clipping tool to create their self-made error. Also, often sellers just say “error!” and expect you to believe it.

There is no hub doubling on this coin:


Likewise, this is loose-die machine doubling–note the flatness of the letters–not a DD error at all.


Here is a common struck-through error caused by metal dust that happened to blur the “S” in “Trust,” and yet the seller asks for a fantastic amount for this low-grade quarter:


Finally, if you just wish to have a collection of these W-mint mark 2019 and 2020 quarters, you can purchase uncirculated ones for about $100. Here’s an eBay example:


If you like posts like this, subscribe so you can be informed whenever there is a new article or column.

Proxiblog also has thousands of followers on Facebook Coin Groups, YouTube and social media. To get the latest discussion and commentary, be sure to friend us by clicking here.

You can find more information about types, varieties, errors, grading, bidding and buying in Coin News Updated: The Essential Guide to Online Bidding. Please consider buying or gifting the work for a friend, as it underwrites this hobbyist blog. Thank you.

The Hunt for “W” Mint Mark Quarters


The hunt for West Point quarters promotes the hobby of coin collecting with real incentives to search for 2019/2020 “America The Beautiful National Park” W-mint examples often found in pocket change and quarter rolls.


In 2019, the holdering company PCGS stoked collector interest in offering a $5,000 reward for the first Lowell West Point Mint Mark Quarter sent in for grading, promising special labels for those submitting this coin for grading in the first 45 days of the initial discovery.


In April 2019, PCGS wrote: “Two avid coin collectors, one in Kansas and the other in Virginia, have agreed to split the $5,000 bounty offered by Professional Coin Grading Service (www.PCGS.com) for almost simultaneously submitting the first 2019 ‘America the Beautiful’ Lowell National Historical Park quarter-dollars with a West Point mint mark. Both submissions arrived on the same day at PCGS headquarters.”

The West Point Mint, typically used to strike silver dollars, produced 10 2019/2020 W-Mint Mark Quarters with a meager mintage of 2,000,000 for each coin of each year. This is an incredibly low mintage for the Washington Quarter series, with only the 1937-S Quarter with a mintage of 1,652,000 within the same low range.


Moreover, the Mint mixed up the W-mint quarters with ones from Philadelphia and Denver, tempting collectors to find them in pocket change.

Ever since, social media–especially YouTube and TikTok–have hyped the value of these coins in numerous videos. Here’s one of them:


You also will find videos and posts promising hundreds and thousands of dollars for a W-mint quarter. That is for super high grade examples such as MS67+ or even MS68. Again these rank as condition rarities, and only a handful have ever graded at that high level.

Nevertheless, the W-mint quarters have some real hobbyist potential.

Here are retail values for each year:


Keep in mind that these retail values are for PCGS graded coins at MS65. The cost of grading almost always will be as much as the value of the coin. Auction hammer prices are typically two-thirds of the retail values. Also if you find a W-mint quarter in pocket change, technically it is considered circulated. That said, you can find near gem examples distributed mistakenly from rolls or deposited in banks from stores and coin machines.

You will find highly exaggerated “buy now” examples on eBay, like this one with a few bag marks from circulation:


Always check the “sold” button on eBay. If you do, you will find that ungraded 10-coin sets of W-mint mark quarters sell typically for between $150-200.


If you are going to spend time roll and coin hunting, the search for W-mint quarters is worth the time and hobbyist fun.

Finally, if you would like a video version of this article, with more information, see:

If you like posts like this, subscribe so you can be informed whenever there is a new article or column.

Proxiblog also has thousands of followers on Facebook Coin Groups and other social media. To get the latest discussion and commentary, be sure to friend us by clicking here.

You can find more information about types, varieties, errors, grading, bidding and buying in Coin News Updated: The Essential Guide to Online Bidding. Please consider buying or gifting the work for a friend, as it underwrites this hobbyist blog. Thank you.