1967 Quarter Value
1967 Washington quarters are clad with no mint mark and are common in circulation. Special Mint Set strikes and high-grade examples carry premiums; a rare silver-planchet error is the standout.
What is your quarter really worth?
Snap a photo and Coin AI identifies the coin, estimates its grade, and gives a value range in seconds.
Key facts
1967 Quarter value by grade
| Grade / Condition | Approximate value (estimate) |
|---|---|
| Circulated | $0.25 (face) |
| Mint State (MS-65) | $0.50–$5 |
| SMS / MS-67 | $20–$200+ |
| Silver Planchet Error | $5,000–$15,000+ |
Ranges are broad, educational estimates — not appraisals. Real value depends on exact grade, eye appeal, varieties, and the live market. Scan your coin in Coin AI for an estimate based on your actual photos.
Notable varieties & errors
- 1967 SMS — Special Mint Set strikes have a higher finish; gems carry premiums.
- 1967 Silver Planchet Error — Struck on a leftover silver blank — a five-figure transitional error.
What is your quarter really worth?
Snap a photo and Coin AI identifies the coin, estimates its grade, and gives a value range in seconds.
Frequently asked questions
Is a 1967 quarter silver?
No — 1967 quarters are copper-nickel clad. The rare exception is a transitional error struck on a leftover silver planchet, which weighs more and is worth thousands.
Why does my 1967 quarter have no mint mark?
The Mint omitted mint marks from 1965 to 1967 during the transition to clad coinage. A 1967 quarter with no mint mark is normal; value comes from condition or a possible error.