1913 Liberty Nickel

Obverse

Reverse
The 1913 Liberty Nickel - King of Coins was minted at the Philadelphia Mint. Values range from $100 in lower grades to $104,725 in top condition. This is a key date, making it especially sought-after by collectors.
CoinValueDB Value Estimate
$1.20 – $104,725
Price History
CoinValueDB Price Guide by Grade
| Grade | Value |
|---|---|
| Good (G-4) | $100 |
| Very Good (VG-8) | $130 |
| Fine (F-12) | $205 |
| Very Fine (VF-20) | $420 |
| Extremely Fine (EF-40) | $690 |
| About Uncirculated (AU-50) | $1,250 |
| Mint State (MS-60) | $2,325 |
| Choice Mint State (MS-63) | $3,850 |
| Gem Mint State (MS-65) | $12,850 |
| Superb Gem+ (MS-67) | $104,725 |
About the Liberty (V) Nickel
The Liberty Head Nickel replaced the Shield Nickel in 1883 to modernize United States coinage. Charles E. Barber, the Chief Engraver of the U.S. Mint, designed the coin. He featured a profile of Lady Liberty on the obverse and a Roman numeral V on the reverse. The Mint chose Barber because he held the official engraving position at the time. The design remained consistent for the duration of the series with one major exception. The original 1883 design lacked the word CENTS on the reverse, which led to a famous scam where people gold-plated the coins to pass them off as five-dollar gold pieces. The Mint quickly corrected this error by adding the word CENTS below the V. Production ended in 1913 when the Mint transitioned to the Buffalo Nickel design. While the Mint recorded only five 1913 Liberty Nickels, they never officially released them into circulation.
Coin Details
- Designer
- Charles E. Barber
- Composition
- 75% Copper, 25% Nickel
- Weight
- 5.0g
- Diameter
- 21.2mm
- Edge
- plain
- Series
- Liberty Head Nickel (1883-1913)
Historical Notes
The 1913 Liberty nickel is one of the most famous and valuable coins in the world. Only 5 specimens are known to exist. Liberty nickels were never officially minted in 1913 - the ones that exist were likely struck illegally by mint employees.
Collecting Liberty (V) Nickel Coins
Focus on building a date set of common years like 1899, 1900, or 1905 to learn the series before spending more on keys. These coins often show heavy wear on Liberty's headband and the word LIBERTY, so buy coins with clear, readable lettering to maintain value. Watch out for altered-date coins where sellers modify a 1903 or 1908 nickel to look like an 1885 or 1886 key date. Always check the reverse for the word CENTS on any 1883 specimen to confirm you have the mass-produced version rather than the variety without it.
This series includes key dates — check individual coin pages for rarity details.
Frequently Asked Questions
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