The program began on January 1, 2007, and, like the
50 State quarters program, was not scheduled to end until every eligible subject was honored. The program was to issue coins featuring each of four presidents per year on the obverse, issuing one for three months before moving on to the next president in chronological order by term in office. To be eligible, a president must have been deceased for at least two years prior to the time of minting. The
United States Mint called it the Presidential $1 Coin Program. The reverse of the coins bears the
Statue of Liberty (formally
Liberty Enlightening the World), the inscription "$1" and the inscription "United States of America" in
all caps, in the font
ITC Benguiat. Inscribed along the edge of the coin is the year of minting or issuance of the coin, the mint mark, 13 stars, and also the legend in the following arrangement: ; before 2009, the national motto "
In God We Trust" was also part of the edge lettering. The word "
Liberty" is absent from the coin altogether, since the decision was made that the image of the Statue of Liberty on the reverse of the coin was sufficient to convey the message of liberty. The text of the act does not specify the color of the coins, but per the U.S. Mint "the specifications will be identical to those used for the current Golden dollar". The
George Washington $1 coin was first available to the public on February 15, 2007, in honor of
Washington's Birthday, which was observed on February 19. This marked the first time since the
St. Gaudens Double Eagle (1907–1933) that the United States had issued a coin with
edge lettering for circulation. Edge-lettered coins date back to the 1790s. The process was started to discourage the
shaving of gold coin edges, a practice which was used to cheat payees. In December 2007, Congress passed , moving "In God We Trust" to either the obverse or reverse of the coins. This is the same bill that created a program that included quarters for
Washington, D.C.,
Puerto Rico,
Northern Mariana Islands,
Guam, the
U.S. Virgin Islands, and
American Samoa. The act had been introduced because of the failure of the
Sacagawea $1 coin to gain widespread circulation in the United States. The act sympathized with the need of the nation's private sector for a $1 coin, and expected that the appeal of changing the design would increase the public demand for new coins, as the public generally responded well to the state quarter program. The program was also intended to help educate the public about the nation's presidents and their history. In case the coins did not catch on with the general public, then the
mint leaders hoped that
collectors would be as interested in the dollars as they were with the state quarters, which generated about $6.3 billion in
seigniorage (
i.e., the difference between the face value of the coins and the cost to produce them) between January 1999 and December 2008. Unlike the state quarter program and the
Westward Journey nickel series, which suspended the issuance of the current design during those programs, the act directed the Mint to continue to issue
Sacagawea dollar coins during the presidential series. The law states that at least one in three issued dollars must be a Sacagawea dollar. Furthermore, the Sacagawea design was required to continue after the presidential coin program ended. These requirements were added at the behest of the
North Dakota congressional delegation to ensure that Sacagawea, whom North Dakotans consider to be one of their own, ultimately remains on the dollar coin. However, Federal Reserve officials indicated to Congress that "if the Presidential $1 Coin Program does not stimulate substantial transactional demand for dollar coins, the requirement that the Mint nonetheless produce Sacagawea dollars would result in costs to the taxpayer without any offsetting benefits." In that event, the Federal Reserve indicated that it would "strongly recommend that Congress reassess the one-third requirement." The one-third requirement was later changed to one-fifth by the
Native American $1 Coin Act, passed on September 20, 2007. Previous versions of the act called for removing from circulation dollar coins issued before the Sacagawea dollar, most notably the
Susan B. Anthony dollar, but the version of the act which became law merely directs the
Secretary of the Treasury to study the matter and report back to Congress. The act required federal government agencies (including the
United States Postal Service), businesses operating on federal property, and federally funded transit systems to accept and dispense dollar coins by January 2008, and to post signs indicating that they do so.
Production The composition continued that of the Sacagawea dollar: a cladding of
manganese brass (containing about 77% copper, 12%
zinc, 7%
manganese, and 4% nickel) over a pure copper core. This composition was chosen because it would give the coin a distinctive golden color, and would also be
electromagnetically identical to its predecessor, the
cupronickel Susan B. Anthony dollar, for
coin acceptors.
Minting errors On March 8, 2007, the United States Mint announced, that on February 15, 2007, an unknown number of
George Washington presidential $1 coins were released into circulation without their edge inscriptions (the U.S. mottos, "In God We Trust" and "", the coin's mint mark, and its year of issuance; i.e. (where is either Philadelphia Mint| or Denver Mint|)). Ron Guth, of the
Professional Coin Grading Service, estimated at least 50,000 coins were released without the edge inscriptions. The first such coin discovered was sold on
eBay for , while later coins were selling for , as of late March 2007. Because one of the inscriptions missing from the coins is the motto "In God we trust", some articles on the subject have referred to them as "godless dollars". Fake versions have also been produced with the edge lettering filed off. Also, John Adams presidential dollars have been discovered with plain edges. They are fewer in quantity than George Washington plain-edge dollars, making them rarer, thus more expensive. A more frequently encountered edge lettering error for the John Adams dollar is a coin with doubled edge lettering. This error occurs when a coin passes through the edge lettering machine twice. Most examples of the doubled-edge-letter John Adams dollar are from the Philadelphia Mint; Denver Mint issues are comparatively scarce. They are seen in two varieties: 1) with both edge lettering inscriptions reading in the same direction, called "overlapped", and 2) with the two inscriptions running in opposite directions—i.e., inverted or upside-down relative to one another—called "inverted". In early March 2007, a Colorado couple found a dollar coin which had not been struck with a die pair (missing the portrait of the president and the Statue of Liberty), but with edge lettering on the otherwise-blank planchet. Some of the coins have the words on the rim struck upside down (president face up). These are not minting errors, but rather a variation created by the minting process. Such upside-down coins have been sold on auction websites like eBay and Amazon for greater than their face value, though they represent roughly 50% of the minted population.
Stockpile and suspension of production By 2011, 1.4 billion uncirculated $1 coins were stockpiled, Rep.
Jackie Speier of California circulated a
"Dear Colleague" letter recommending that the U.S. not produce any dollar coins. She was planning to introduce legislation calling for the immediate halting of all dollar coin programs. The United States
Government Accountability Office has stated that discontinuing the dollar bill in favor of the dollar coin would save the U.S. government about $5.5 billion over 30 years. On December 13, 2011, Vice President
Joe Biden and Treasury Secretary
Timothy Geithner announced that the minting of presidential $1 coins for circulation would be suspended. Future entries in the program, beginning with those of
Chester A. Arthur, would be issued in reduced quantities, only for collectors. By the end of 2022, the stockpile of $1 coins was reduced to 888 million. The inventory was estimated to last for nearly 16 more years (i.e. until 2038).
The program's end and continuation The act specifies that for a former president to be honored, they must have been deceased for at least two years before issue. Hence, former presidents
George H. W. Bush,
Jimmy Carter,
Bill Clinton,
George W. Bush, and then-current president
Barack Obama were ineligible to have a dollar coin issued in their honor when the series ended in 2016, after honoring
Ronald Reagan, the last president who was eligible. Since the program has terminated, producing coins for those presidents not yet honored would require another
Act of Congress. On February 12, 2019, Senator
John Cornyn introduced a bill to authorize a presidential dollar honoring
George H. W. Bush and an accompanying first spouse gold coin for
Barbara Bush, which was signed into law by President
Donald Trump on January 28, 2020. On February 19, 2025, Senator
Catherine Cortez Masto introduced a bill, following the death of former president
Jimmy Carter almost two months earlier, seeking to extend the program to issue the coins of deceased presidents not yet honored. ==Collecting==