2000 Quarter Value Checker: Errors List, “D”, “S” & “P” Mint Mark Worth

2000 Quarter Value

2000-P Massachusetts Quarter value ranges from $0.25 face value to $3,760. That record sale was a Grade 69 example sold through Heritage Auctions in January 2017. Upload a photo of yours below and we’ll give you a quick value range based on your coin’s condition. You can also scroll down to check recent eBay sales to see what buyers are paying today.

2000 Quarter Value Checker

Identify 2000 Quarter D, S & P Mint Mark Price

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Front Obverse

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Back Reverse

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2000 Quarter Value By Variety

Each 2000 quarter tells its own pricing story depending on mint location, metal composition, and condition grade. The chart below breaks down what different varieties actually trade for in today’s market.

If you know the grade of your coin, you can find the exact price below in the Value Guides section.

TypeGood(G4-6)Fine(F12-15)AU(AU50-58)MS(MS60-70)PR(PR60-70)
2000 P Massachusetts Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $6,440
2000 D Massachusetts Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $8,280
2000 P Maryland Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $130
2000 D Maryland Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $250
2000 P South Carolina Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $7,360
2000 D South Carolina Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $92
2000 P New Hampshire Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $160
2000 D New Hampshire Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $360
2000 P Virginia Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $110
2000 P Virginia PL Quarter Value$4 - $5$9 - $10$32 - $53$62 - $130
2000 D Virginia Quarter Value$0.25$0.25$0.70 - $1$2 - $590
2000 S Massachusetts DCAM Quarter Value$4 - $23
2000 S Maryland DCAM Quarter Value$4 - $25
2000 S South Carolina DCAM Quarter Value$4 - $23
2000 S New Hampshire DCAM Quarter Value$4 - $27
2000 S Virginia DCAM Quarter Value$4 - $23
2000 S Massachusetts Silver DCAM Quarter Value$14 - $55
2000 S Maryland Silver DCAM Quarter Value$14 - $46
2000 S South Carolina Silver DCAM Quarter Value$14 - $50
2000 S New Hampshire Silver DCAM Quarter Value$14 - $130
2000 S Virginia Silver DCAM Quarter Value$14 - $82
2000 P Massachusetts Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 D Massachusetts Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 P Maryland Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 D Maryland Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 P South Carolina Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 D South Carolina Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 P New Hampshire Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 D New Hampshire Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 P Virginia Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 P Virginia PL Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 D Virginia Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S Massachusetts DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S Maryland DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S South Carolina DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S New Hampshire DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S Virginia DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S Massachusetts Silver DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S Maryland Silver DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S South Carolina Silver DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S New Hampshire Silver DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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2000 S Virginia Silver DCAM Quarter Value — eBay market data
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Also Read: State Quarter Value (1999-2008)

 

Top 10 Most Valuable 2000 Quarter Worth Money

Most Valuable 2000 Quarter Chart

2000 - Present

The market rewards exceptional preservation with dramatic premiums. Two Philadelphia-minted coins in MS69 condition dominate auction records—the Massachusetts quarter reached $3,760, while South Carolina achieved $3,525. These represent the finest known regular-strike examples, with no higher grades certified by PCGS.

Mid-grade specimens show substantial variance. A 2000-D South Carolina in MS63 sold for $2,990, considerably higher than typical MS63 values for this series.

Philadelphia strikes in MS64-MS65 grades, like New Hampshire at $2,128 and Maryland at $1,495, occupy the middle tier. Even a Denver Virginia quarter graded AU55—meaning About Uncirculated with only slight wear—commanded $1,610, highlighting how condition directly impacts returns.

Silver proof coins in perfect PR70 condition maintain steady values. The clad New Hampshire DCAM proof set a record of $881 at Heritage Auctions in 2013, while silver versions in PR70 have reached $978 to $1,035 across the different state designs. The consistency reflects the controlled production quality at San Francisco, where each proof silver quarter was struck with a mintage of exactly 965,421 pieces per design.

 

History of The 2000 Quarter

The 50 State Quarters Program originated from the 50 States Commemorative Coin Program Act, authorized by Public Law 105-124 (111 Stat. 2534). Congress passed it in 1997, and President Bill Clinton signed it into law on December 1, 1997, authorizing a decade-long initiative to honor each state through commemorative quarter designs.

The year 2000 marked both the second year of this groundbreaking series and the dawn of a new millennium. Released during this transitional period, the 2000 quarters carried symbolic weight as Americans entered the 21st century.

Philip Diehl, who served as United States Mint Director through 2000, had championed this initiative to revitalize American coin collecting and engage younger generations with history. Notably, when Diehl left the Mint in 2000, the Treasury scaled back the program’s promotional elements—even as revenue continued climbing.

The five states featured in 2000—Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire, and Virginia—shared a unique historical connection. All five ratified the Constitution in 1788, making them part of the original framework of American democracy.

Public participation defined the program’s success. Most states invited citizens to submit design concepts and held advisory committees or public votes to select final designs. An estimated 147 million Americans collected the quarters across the full series, while the program generated approximately $3 billion in seigniorage (profit from coin production) for the U.S. government over its ten-year run.

According to the U.S. Mint, the program was directly inspired by the Royal Canadian Mint’s 1992 “Canada 125” commemorative 25-cent series, which sparked a similar revival of coin collecting north of the border. That Canadian success story prompted American numismatists to advocate for a U.S. equivalent through the Citizens Commemorative Coin Advisory Committee.

Also Read: Top 100 Most Valuable Modern Quarters Worth Money List (1965-Present)

 

Is Your 2000 Quarter Rare?

10

2000-P Massachusetts Quarter

Common
Ranked 71 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-D Massachusetts Quarter

Common
Ranked 67 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-P Maryland Quarter

Common
Ranked 232 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-D Maryland Quarter

Common
Ranked 192 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-P South Carolina Quarter

Common
Ranked 70 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-D South Carolina Quarter

Common
Ranked 245 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-P New Hampshire Quarter

Common
Ranked 219 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-D New Hampshire Quarter

Common
Ranked 162 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-P Virginia Quarter

Common
Ranked 240 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-P Virginia PL Quarter

Common
Ranked 231 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-D Virginia Quarter

Common
Ranked 137 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-S Massachusetts DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 308 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-S Maryland DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 324 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-S South Carolina DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 309 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-S New Hampshire DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 318 in Washington 50 States Quarters
10

2000-S Virginia DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 314 in Washington 50 States Quarters
12

2000-S Massachusetts Silver DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 11 in Washington 50 States Quarters
12

2000-S Maryland Silver DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 15 in Washington 50 States Quarters
12

2000-S South Carolina Silver DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 16 in Washington 50 States Quarters
12

2000-S New Hampshire Silver DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 7 in Washington 50 States Quarters
12

2000-S Virginia Silver DCAM Quarter

Common
Ranked 9 in Washington 50 States Quarters

The Coin Identifier and Value App helps you instantly assess your 2000 quarters’ rarity by analyzing grade, mint mark, and distinctive characteristics that separate common circulation strikes from collectible specimens.

 

Key Features of The 2000 Quarter

Knowing the design elements and physical characteristics of 2000 quarters helps collectors identify authentic specimens and appreciate the artistic craftsmanship behind these commemorative coins.

Each quarter shares a consistent obverse design while featuring unique state-specific reverse imagery that reflects regional history and identity.

The Obverse Of The 2000 Quarter

The Obverse Of The 2000 Quarter

The obverse maintains the familiar portrait of George Washington, originally created by sculptor John Flanagan in 1932 and modified by William Cousins for the State Quarters Program. The inscription “UNITED STATES OF AMERICA” curves along the upper rim, while “QUARTER DOLLAR” appears at the bottom.

“LIBERTY” is positioned to the left of Washington’s profile, with “IN GOD WE TRUST” on the right side. The mint mark—P for Philadelphia, D for Denver, or S for San Francisco—appears below “IN GOD WE TRUST.”

The Reverse Of The 2000 Quarter

The Reverse Of The 2000 Quarter

Each of the five 2000 state quarters displays distinctive reverse imagery. All five reverse designs were executed primarily by U.S. Mint Sculptor-Engraver Thomas D. Rogers, with the Virginia design credited to Edgar Z. Steever.

Massachusetts: The Minuteman statue from Concord stands prominently against the state outline, with “THE BAY STATE” inscription. Massachusetts limited its design competition exclusively to schoolchildren—a first for the program—with a sixth-grader and seventh-grader selected as co-winners.

Maryland: The design showcases the Maryland State House dome paired with a white oak tree, accompanied by “The Old Line State” nickname—a title bestowed by George Washington honoring Maryland soldiers’ steadfast service during the Revolutionary War. The State House dome is also historically significant because the Continental Congress met there in 1783-1784 to ratify the Treaty of Paris ending the Revolutionary War.

South Carolina: A Carolina Wren perches on a branch before a cabbage palmetto tree and yellow jessamine blossoms, arranged within the state outline, with “THE PALMETTO STATE” inscription. The palmetto tree’s spongy wood famously absorbed British cannon fire during the 1776 defense of Charleston Harbor.

New Hampshire: Old Man of the Mountain, the iconic granite rock formation, dominates the center surrounded by nine stars representing New Hampshire’s position as the ninth state to ratify the Constitution, alongside the motto “Live Free or Die.” Tragically, this 40-foot granite profile collapsed in May 2003—just three years after the coin was struck—making it a permanent record of a vanished natural landmark.

Virginia: Three colonial ships—Susan Constant, Godspeed, and Discovery—sail across the reverse, with the inscription “Jamestown 1607–2007” marking the settlement’s 400th anniversary. This design uniquely commemorated an event seven years in the future at the time of minting. Virginia also holds the distinction of having the highest mintage of any 2000 quarter, with over 1.5 billion coins struck between both mints.

All reverses include the state name, the year “1788” (when these states ratified the Constitution), the release year “2000,” and the motto “E PLURIBUS UNUM.”

Other Features Of The 2000 Quarter

Standard circulation quarters feature a copper-nickel clad composition—meaning a pure copper core sandwiched between outer layers of 91.67% copper and 8.33% nickel. Special silver proof versions produced at San Francisco contain 90% silver and 10% copper, making them distinct from circulation strikes.

The quarters measure 24.26 millimeters in diameter and 1.75 millimeters in thickness. Clad versions weigh 5.67 grams, while silver proofs weigh 6.25 grams due to the denser metal content. At current silver spot prices near $48.52 per ounce (as of late 2025), the 0.1808 troy ounces of silver in each proof quarter translates to a melt value of approximately $8.77—providing a price floor even on circulated or damaged silver proofs.

The edge features 119 reeds—the distinctive ridges that prevent counterfeiting and provide tactile identification. This reeded edge design has remained a standard security feature on U.S. quarters since their inception.

Also Read: Washington Quarter Value (1932-1998)

 

2000 Quarter Mintage & Survival Data

2000 Quarter Mintage & Survival Chart

Mintage Comparison

Survival Distribution

TypeMintageSurvivalSurvival Rate
P Massachusetts628,600,000471,450,00075%
P Maryland678,200,000508,650,00075%
P South Carolina742,576,000556,932,00075%
P New Hampshire673,040,000504,780,00075%
P Virginia943,000,000707,250,00075%

Virginia quarters dominate both mintage and survival figures with 943 million Philadelphia-mint coins struck—and that’s before counting the Denver production. Coinweek’s historical documentation notes that the Virginia design had a combined mintage of over 1.5 billion coins across both mints, making it the single most-produced quarter of the year 2000. This represents significantly higher numbers than the other four states.

All five Philadelphia-minted designs maintain approximately 75% survival rates. Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, and New Hampshire each show survival figures between 471 million and 557 million coins.

The consistent survival rate across designs indicates uniform attrition patterns regardless of the specific state featured. Approximately one quarter of each design has been removed from circulation over the past two-plus decades through loss, destruction, or melting.

An important production note from PCGS historical records: 2000-dated Massachusetts quarters were actually struck beginning in December 1999, with roughly 71 million Philadelphia coins and 63 million Denver coins produced in that calendar year. The final mintage totals were not complete until well into early 2000, illustrating how mint production overlaps calendar years.

Also Read: America The Beautiful Quarters Value (2010-2021)

 

The Easy Way to Know Your 2000 Quarter Value

Checking your 2000 quarter’s worth starts with examining the mint mark—P, D, or S—located near Washington’s portrait on the obverse.

Next, inspect the coin’s surface for signs of wear, scratches, or mint errors like off-center strikes and doubled dies that can dramatically increase value. Compare your coin’s condition against professional grading standards, noting luster and detail preservation.

For accurate, instant results, the Coin Identifier and Value App simplifies this process by scanning your coin and providing comprehensive grade analysis, error detection, and current market values—eliminating the need for manual comparisons and guesswork.

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2000 Quarter Value Guides

Each of the five 2000 quarters presents unique value characteristics based on grade rarity and market performance:

  • 2000 Massachusetts Quarter: First millennium quarter with exceptional MS69 specimens; the Denver MS69 holds the record at approximately $9,000.
  • 2000 Maryland Quarter: Mid-tier values peaking at MS68 certification levels; notable for the famous wrong-planchet error struck on a dime blank.
  • 2000 South Carolina Quarter: Strong high-grade premiums approaching $3,525 at MS69; design complexity makes top-grade strikes exceptionally scarce with fewer than 500 MS68 specimens certified by PCGS.
  • 2000 New Hampshire Quarter: Consistent collector demand across certification grades; 71 MS68 specimens maintain stable $175 valuations.
  • 2000 Virginia Quarter: Highest circulation numbers yet maintains MS68 premiums near $400-$650 for Denver examples; only two Prooflike (PL) specimens are certified, each worth around $150.

Grade determines everything—coins grading MS67 and above separate dramatically in value, with MS68 examples ranging from hundreds to thousands depending on the state. According to PCGS population data reviewed across the series, out of 140,888+ total state quarters submitted for grading, only a tiny fraction ever achieve MS69, and MS70 examples are essentially nonexistent for business strikes.

Massachusetts leads premium territory with MS69 specimens reaching nearly $9,000 for Denver strikes and $3,760 for Philadelphia. Proof versions offer accessible entry points, with silver DCAM proofs trading consistently while clad DCAM proofs remain modest.

 

2000 Massachusetts Quarter Value

2000 Massachusetts Quarter Value

The 2000 Massachusetts Quarter opened the new millennium as the first State Quarter of the year—and it was produced through an unusually democratic process. Massachusetts limited design submissions exclusively to schoolchildren, and two students—a sixth-grader and a seventh-grader—were selected as co-winners of the statewide competition. This makes the Minuteman design uniquely the work of young Americans, not professional artists.

While circulated examples remain at face value, pristine specimens reveal remarkable value disparities. Both Philadelphia and Denver mints achieved MS69 as their highest certification, with no coins graded higher at either service. Per PCGS CoinFacts, MS69 represents “the ultimate grade” for this issue, with none being finer.

Philadelphia MS69 examples command approximately $7,000, while Denver’s single MS69 specimen reached $9,000—representing the most valuable regular-strike 2000 state quarter of any design. The clad DCAM proof version struck at San Francisco (mintage: 4,816,747) saw a PR70 example sell for $300 at Heritage Auctions in May 2013. Standard uncirculated pieces grade around $5 to $14, with values climbing sharply at MS67 and above.

Collectors should prioritize professionally certified high-grade examples to ensure authenticity. Beware of privately altered gold-plated quarters sold as special editions—these lack any numismatic premium and are worth only face value.

2000-P Massachusetts Quarter Price/Grade Chart

Price by 1-70 Grade (Latest Auction Records Included)

Updated: 2026-06-07 06:32:21

The auction history chart shows this quarter’s performance over two decades.

Date PlatformPrice Grade

Recent market activity illustrates current collector demand patterns.

Market Activity: 2000-P Massachusetts Quarter

 

2000 Maryland Quarter Value

2000 Maryland Quarter Value

The Maryland Quarter depicts the dome of Maryland’s State House—the oldest state capitol building still in continuous legislative use in the United States. The Continental Congress met inside those walls in 1783-1784 to ratify the Treaty of Paris, officially ending the Revolutionary War, and George Washington resigned his commission as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army there on December 23, 1783.

Designer Thomas D. Rogers included the motto “The Old Line State,” a tribute to Maryland troops renowned for their steadfast defense during the Revolution. Maryland had enormous mintages: 678,200,000 from Philadelphia and 556,532,000 from Denver, making circulated examples extremely common.

Auction records reveal the dramatic value differences across variants. The most remarkable sale involved a Philadelphia error struck on a nickel planchet (wrong metal composition), which brought $1,495 in MS65 at Heritage Auctions in January 2005. Standard circulation strikes show more modest returns—a Denver MS68 example sold for $250 on eBay in July 2011. The silver DCAM proof (mintage: 965,421) set an early record of $1,006 at Heritage Auctions in October 2003 for a PR70 example, though current PR70 values have moderated since.

For new collectors, bank-roll searching is a practical starting point. Look for clear detail in the dome’s wooden construction detail, which separates well-preserved pieces from worn examples.

2000-D Maryland Quarter Price/Grade Chart

Price by 1-70 Grade (Latest Auction Records Included)

Updated: 2026-06-07 06:32:21

Below is the auction record chart highlighting the prices realized for the quarter across different grades.

Date PlatformPrice Grade

The most recent year’s market activity provides essential context for understanding this quarter’s true standing among collectors.

Market Activity: 2000-D Maryland Quarter

 

2000 South Carolina Quarter Value

2000 South Carolina Quarter Value

South Carolina’s design draws on its Revolutionary War legacy. The palmetto tree—whose spongy wood absorbed British cannon fire during the 1776 defense of Charleston Harbor—became a lasting symbol of resilience earned in battle.

That same complexity shapes the coin’s modern collectability. The palmetto’s layered bark and the Carolina wren’s fine feathering are difficult to strike cleanly, making top-grade circulation pieces exceptionally rare. Per PCGS CoinFacts, South Carolina quarters in MS68 condition are scarce with fewer than 500 certified, while MS69 examples are extremely rare with PCGS having graded only a handful. Among business strikes, only a single Philadelphia example has been confirmed at MS69, with a market value near $8,000, while the Bullion Shark price guide notes that PCGS has graded just one coin at that level.

San Francisco issues follow a different path. The silver DCAM proofs (mintage: 965,421) uniformly carry the Deep Cameo designation—meaning strong, frosted contrast between design elements and mirror-like fields—and prices remain approachable: clad proofs typically sell for $18–25, silver proofs about $22 at PR69, and up to $55 in PR70.

As State Quarter collecting matures as a hobby, coins that unite technical difficulty with strong historical symbolism—like South Carolina’s Revolutionary narrative rendered in metal—stand out as long-term focal points for discerning collectors.

2000-S South Carolina Silver Quarter Price/Grade Chart

Price by 1-70 Grade (Latest Auction Records Included)

Updated: 2026-06-07 06:32:21

Complete auction results spanning two decades demonstrate how premium examples have performed.

Date PlatformPrice Grade

And recent market activity patterns reveal current collector preferences and emerging value trends.

Market Activity: 2000-S South Carolina Silver Quarter

 

2000 New Hampshire Quarter Value

2000 New Hampshire Quarter Value

The 2000 New Hampshire Quarter immortalized a landmark that would vanish just three years later. When the Old Man of the Mountain collapsed in May 2003, the coin became a permanent record of the 40-foot granite profile that had watched over Franconia Notch for millennia, bearing the state motto “Live Free or Die.” Nine stars surround the formation, each representing New Hampshire’s position as the ninth state to ratify the Constitution.

Premium circulation strikes demonstrate unexpected collecting depth. A Philadelphia MS64 example realized $2,128 at Scotsman Auctions in January 2004, reflecting early program enthusiasm. The clad DCAM proof (mintage: 4,816,747) also saw a notable sale—a PR69 brought $881 at Heritage Auctions in February 2013, showing collector appreciation for the coin’s historical significance.

Currently, 71 MS68 specimens certified by major grading services maintain stable $175 valuations. Denver strikes command higher premiums at equivalent grades—MS67 examples trade around $400—reflecting their greater scarcity in top condition. Heritage Auctions documented this premium when a Denver MS68 brought $633 in 2007.

The silver DCAM proof (mintage: 965,421) provides an accessible entry point with intrinsic metal value backing. A PR70 DCAM silver example sold on eBay for $650 in August 2021, reflecting steady demand for these milestone coins tied to a now-lost natural wonder.

2000-S New Hampshire Silver Quarter Price/Grade Chart

Price by 1-70 Grade (Latest Auction Records Included)

Updated: 2026-06-07 06:32:21

Detailed auction histories trace how this quarter moved beyond everyday circulation into a recognized cultural artifact.

Date PlatformPrice Grade

Twelve-month market tracking then reveals how ongoing activity continues to shape collector perception and demand.

Market Activity: 2000-S New Hampshire Silver Quarter

 

2000 Virginia Quarter Value

2000 Virginia Quarter Value

Virginia’s design uniquely commemorated Jamestown’s 400th anniversary seven years in advance, linking 1607’s founding to 2007’s celebration. The three ships—Susan Constant, Godspeed, and Discovery—represent colonization’s calculated gamble, a narrative Virginia voters embraced overwhelmingly. With a combined mintage exceeding 1.5 billion coins between both mints, the Virginia quarter is the most-produced design of the year 2000 by a wide margin.

Philadelphia production occasionally yielded Prooflike (PL) specimens—business strikes from freshly polished dies exhibiting mirror-like fields similar to proof coins. These emerge accidentally from the very first impressions before dies dull through repeated use. Grading services have certified just two PL examples: one MS64 and one MS65, each valued around $150. Regular MS64-MS65 strikes trade for merely $5, demonstrating the PL designation’s substantial premium.

For high-grade circulation strikes, the Virginia MS68 examples show some of the most interesting price dynamics of the year. According to CoinPriceSurvey data, a 2000-D Virginia in MS68 (with only 17 PCGS-graded specimens at that level) sells for approximately $650, significantly outpacing other 2000 state quarters at the same grade.

Given the scarcity of premium circulation strikes, silver proofs offer accessible alternatives. The silver DCAM proof (mintage: 965,421) in PR69 condition trades near $20, while PR70 examples have reached $978 at Heritage Auctions in December 2007. The 90% silver composition provides downside protection—current melt value alone supports baseline pricing regardless of collector demand shifts.

2000-S Virginia Quarter Price/Grade Chart

Price by 1-70 Grade (Latest Auction Records Included)

Updated: 2026-06-07 06:32:21

Recent auction appearances further highlight how grade and eye appeal drive value differences among surviving examples.

Date PlatformPrice Grade

Following that, the chart illustrates how these coins have performed in the market over the past year.

Market Activity: 2000-S Virginia Quarter

Also Read: 22 Rare Quarter Errors List with Pictures (By Year)

 

Rare 2000 Quarter Error List

The 2000 fifty state quarters marked the program’s second year, releasing designs for Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire, and Virginia. Among the billions produced, certain minting mistakes transformed ordinary quarters into collectible rarities—and one error from this year holds the distinction of being ranked the single greatest mint error in all of U.S. coinage history.

1. The Sacagawea Dollar/State Quarter Mule Error (Most Valuable)

This is the crown jewel of 2000 quarter errors—and arguably the most famous error coin in modern U.S. numismatic history. In May 2000, Frank Wallis of Mountain Home, Arkansas discovered a coin with the obverse (front) of a Washington State Quarter paired with the reverse (back) of a brand-new Sacagawea Dollar, struck on a dollar-coin planchet. This was the first authentic “mule” error ever known to be released into regular U.S. circulation.

A mule is a coin accidentally struck using two dies not intended to be paired together. Because both sides of this coin display their original denominations—the quarter obverse reads “QUARTER DOLLAR” while the dollar reverse implies “$1″—this error technically carries a combined face value of $1.25. Three separate die pairs have been identified among the known examples.

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As of early 2024, approximately 20 known specimens exist. The record auction price was set by GreatCollections on January 21, 2024: a PCGS MS66 example from Die Pair 1 sold for $194,062.50 (including buyer’s premium), surpassing the previous record of $192,000 set in a March 2018 Stack’s Bowers sale. The error is ranked #1 in the reference book The 100 Greatest U.S. Error Coins by David Camire, Nicholas Brown, and Fred Weinberg (Whitman, 2010)—it even graces the book’s cover.

A separate and unique variant also exists: in 2022, a Sacagawea Dollar obverse / South Carolina Quarter reverse mule appeared at Heritage Auctions, making it an even rarer and more dramatic variant of this famous error family.

2. Off-Center Strike Errors

This error happens when the blank metal disc shifts position before the dies strike. The design prints partially off the coin, leaving blank space on one edge.

New Hampshire quarters show this flaw notably. With over 673 million struck in Philadelphia alone, off-center examples remain uncommon discoveries—but not impossible to find. The Old Man of the Mountain design and state motto may extend past the rim, while Washington’s portrait crowds toward one edge.

The displacement percentage determines value. Minor 5-10% shifts bring $10-$20, while 20-40% misalignments reach $20-$100. Dramatic examples preserving the full date despite severe displacement command premium prices. One certified MS67 specimen with 25% displacement sold for $195 at a February 2022 auction.

3. Missing Clad Layer Errors

Modern quarters sandwich pure copper between copper-nickel outer layers. Bonding failures occasionally allow incomplete coins into production. Maryland quarters from 2000 demonstrate this manufacturing defect.

The exposed copper core creates distinctive orange or brownish discoloration instead of the standard silvery finish. A confirmed 2000-D Maryland Missing Clad Layer example weighs just 4.7 grams (versus the standard 5.67 grams), making weight a reliable first diagnostic.

These errors typically trade between $500-$1,000, with exceptional specimens reaching higher. Notable collections including the Fred Weinberg holdings have featured certified Maryland examples. Building complete 50-state error sets featuring missing clad examples is a challenging but popular collector goal.

4. Wrong Planchet Strike Errors (Quarter on Dime Planchet)

Smaller dime blanks occasionally slip into quarter presses, creating dramatically undersized coins. Maryland quarters struck on dime planchets measure just 17.91mm versus the standard 24.26mm diameter.

The compressed design pushes Washington’s portrait nearly to the edges. Weight provides clear evidence—2.268 grams matches dime specifications rather than the quarter’s 5.67 grams. Philadelphia’s automated systems typically reject mismatched planchets, making these errors exceptional.

Approximately 15 state quarters struck on dime planchets exist across the entire 1999-2008 series. Well-preserved Maryland examples can bring several thousand dollars at auction, with certification from PCGS or NGC (the two most trusted professional grading services) essential for authentication.

 

Where To Sell Your 2000 Quarter?

Collectors seeking to sell 2000 state quarters should evaluate multiple selling venues, including professional coin dealers, auction houses, and online platforms, to secure competitive pricing.

Check out now: Best Places To Sell Coins Online (Pros & Cons)

 

2000 Quarter Market Trend

Market Interest Trend Chart - 2000 Quarter

*Market Trend Chart showing the number of people paying attention to this coin.

 

FAQ About the 2000 Quarter

1. Which 2000 quarter is the most valuable regular-strike coin?

The 2000-D Massachusetts Quarter in MS69 holds the record as the most valuable regular-strike 2000 state quarter, selling for approximately $9,000. Philadelphia MS69 examples of the same design reached $7,000. Per PCGS CoinFacts, MS69 represents the absolute finest known grade for this issue, with none certified higher at either grading service.

2. What makes high-grade 2000 state quarters so rare?

The dramatic value increase at MS68 and MS69 grades reflects conditional rarity, not low mintage. PCGS data shows that South Carolina quarters are scarce in MS68 with fewer than 500 certified, and extremely rare in MS69. Design complexity—like South Carolina’s palmetto bark and Carolina wren feathering—made perfectly clean strikes difficult to achieve during high-volume production.

3. Are silver proof 2000 state quarters a good investment?

Silver proof 2000 state quarters offer accessible entry points with built-in downside protection. The 90% silver composition (0.1808 troy oz per coin) provides a melt value floor near $8.77 at current silver prices. PR69 silver proofs trade around $20-$22, while perfect PR70 DCAM examples have reached $978-$1,035 at Heritage Auctions. Each design was struck to a mintage of exactly 965,421 pieces.

4. What is the 2000 Sacagawea Mule error and why is it so valuable?

The Sacagawea Mule is a coin accidentally struck using the obverse die of a Washington State Quarter and the reverse die of a Sacagawea Dollar, on a dollar planchet. About 20 examples are known from three different die pairs. It was the first authentic mule ever released into U.S. circulation and is ranked #1 in The 100 Greatest U.S. Error Coins. The all-time auction record is $194,062.50, set at GreatCollections on January 21, 2024.

5. What does DCAM mean on a 2000 S quarter proof?

DCAM stands for Deep Cameo—a designation given to proof coins that display intense, dramatic frosting on the raised design elements (devices) contrasting sharply against highly polished, mirror-like background fields. It’s the most desirable proof surface designation. All 2000-S proof quarters from San Francisco, whether clad or silver, carry the DCAM designation due to modern striking techniques. DCAM proofs command higher premiums than coins designated simply CAM (lighter frosting) or no cameo at all.

6. How can I tell if my 2000 quarter has a missing clad layer error?

The easiest test is weight. A standard 2000 quarter weighs exactly 5.67 grams. A coin missing its outer clad layer (the copper-nickel bonding) will weigh noticeably less—confirmed Maryland examples weigh approximately 4.7 grams. Visually, the exposed copper core appears orange or brownish instead of the standard silvery color. Never clean the coin before having it assessed—cleaning destroys numismatic value.

7. Are 2000 quarters with no mint mark valuable?

A 2000 quarter with no visible mint mark is simply a Philadelphia-minted coin—the P mint mark can sometimes be difficult to see under poor lighting. Philadelphia coins are not rare; they account for the majority of 2000 quarter production (hundreds of millions per design). The only exception would be a genuine proof coin missing its S mint mark, which would be a major error worth having professionally authenticated.

8. Why does my 2000 quarter show the date 1788?

The “1788” date on all five 2000 state quarters marks the year each of those states ratified the U.S. Constitution and joined the Union. Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire, and Virginia all ratified in 1788, making them part of the original constitutional framework. The “2000” date beside it is the year the coin was minted—both dates appear together on every reverse design in this series.

9. What is a Prooflike (PL) 2000 Virginia quarter and why is it scarce?

A Prooflike (PL) quarter is a regular business-strike coin—not a proof—that accidentally displays mirror-like fields similar to proof coins. This happens when a freshly polished die strikes one of the very first coins before it dulls from repeated use. For the 2000 Virginia quarter, grading services have certified just two PL examples: one MS64 and one MS65, each valued around $150. A regular MS64-MS65 Virginia quarter trades for about $5, so the PL designation adds a premium of nearly 30 times.

10. How much is a 2000 quarter worth in average circulated condition?

The vast majority of 2000 state quarters found in pocket change are worth exactly face value—25 cents. Grades from Good through Fine, and even most Extremely Fine (EF) examples, carry no numismatic premium because billions were minted. You need a coin graded at least MS67 by PCGS or NGC to see meaningful collector premiums above a few dollars. Only MS68 and above—or certified error coins—reach prices in the hundreds to thousands of dollars.

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