Back button
coin-icon-tr

Greysheet & CPG® PRICE GUIDE

About This Series

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the $20 Saint Gaudens Gold (1907–1933) series of Pre-1933 Gold Coinage in the U.S. Coins contains 68 distinct entries with CPG® values between $3,100.00 and $21,600,000.00.
America's most beautifully designed gold coin, the Saint Gaudens Double Eagle, succeeded the long lasting Liberty Head series in 1907. The Saints then remained until the very end which was 1933 when the rein of circulating gold coinage in America came to an end. For many reasons beyond just its looks this series is certainly one of the more popularly collected gold coins in American numismatics. The attractiveness of this coin and its name came to be when Augustus Saint-Gaudens was selected to redesign certain coinage under President Theodore Roosevelt’s directive. This was not the first nor last time new designs were made on American coinage for the sole purpose of the United States wanting to have the world’s most eye appealing money. Augustus Saint-Gaudens may not be overly well-known today but at the start of the 20th century he was one of America’s most famous and skilled sculptors. Saint-Gaudens overperformed his expectations to say the very least by anyone’s standards. The new Double Eagle had a busy design with much detail yet was in no way cluttered and every part of the coin truly complimented each other. The only design change for this coin was the quick addition of the IN GOID WE TRUST Motto which has left collectors with the No Motto type 1 and the With Motto type 2. The motto was only missing for under 2 years before it was added and remained for the rest of the 25 year duration. The Saint Gaudens Double Eagle was first struck in high relief format in which those coins are without a doubt that much more bold and beautiful. Although, mass production at the time could not sustain this method of design and striking so after barely a year the dies’ relief had to be lowered. The mintage for these 1907 high reliefs was cut off at just 12,000 which would end up being the lowest mintage for the entire series. Except at the time no one expected all the melting of certain issues making this series unique in that lower mintages does not correspond with greater rarity. There were proof strikes produced for this series from 1908 through 1915 which are all extremely scarce and valuable. As for the regular business strike coins that make up most of this series, they were minted in Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco. Many issues in this series are worth just a slight premium over the gold value unless found in very high gem grades. The notable rarities in this series are numerous as all dates selected for mass melting now have astronomical numismatic value for those surviving examples. The 1933 Saint is a multimillion dollar coin and only one is legal to own in private hands. That leaves the 1927-D as the most rare date if you discount the 1933. This series has so much going for it and limitless ways for collectors and investors to acquire them.

Catalog Detail

  $20 Saint Gaudens Gold (1907–1933) Value Range Favorite
$20 Saint Gaudens Gold (1907–1933) Value Range  
Saint Gaudens Gold Double Eagle $20 High Relief, 1907 MS Type Coin, High Relief
$10,000
-
$900,000
$10,000 - $900,000
Saint Gaudens Gold Double Eagle $20 No Motto, 1907-1908 MS Type Coin
$3,150
-
$180,000
$3,150 - $180,000
Saint Gaudens Gold Double Eagle $20 With Motto, 1908-1933 MS Type Coin
$3,150
-
$108,000
$3,150 - $108,000
1907 $20 High Relief, Wire Edge MS High Relief
$10,000
-
$900,000
$10,000 - $900,000
1907 $20 High Relief, Flat Edge MS High Relief
$10,000
-
$585,000
$10,000 - $585,000
1907 $20 Saint Gaudens, No Motto MS
$3,150
-
$360,000
$3,150 - $360,000
1908 $20 No Motto MS
$3,150
-
$180,000
$3,150 - $180,000
1908-D $20 No Motto MS
$3,150
-
$60,000
$3,150 - $60,000

Visit these great CDN Sponsors

CDN Sponsors

1908 $20 Motto MS
$3,150
-
$216,000
$3,150 - $216,000
1908-D $20 Motto MS
$3,150
-
$186,000
$3,150 - $186,000
1908-S $20 MS
$3,750
-
$372,000
$3,750 - $372,000
1909 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$288,000
$3,150 - $288,000
1909/8 $20 MS
$3,250
-
$295,000
$3,250 - $295,000
1909/8 $20 Overdate, FS-301 MS
$3,300
-
$295,000
$3,300 - $295,000
1909-D $20 MS
$3,250
-
$420,000
$3,250 - $420,000
1909-S $20 MS
$3,150
-
$102,000
$3,150 - $102,000
1909-S/S $20 Repunched Mintmark, FS-501 MS
$3,100
-
$27,500
$3,100 - $27,500
1909-S/S $20 Repunched Mintmark, FS-502 MS
$3,100
-
$27,500
$3,100 - $27,500
1910 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$78,000
$3,150 - $78,000
1910-D $20 MS
$3,150
-
$117,000
$3,150 - $117,000
1910-S $20 MS
$3,150
-
$216,000
$3,150 - $216,000
1911 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$384,000
$3,150 - $384,000
1911-D $20 MS
$3,150
-
$96,000
$3,150 - $96,000
1911-D/D $20 Repunched Mintmark, FS-501 MS
$3,150
-
$105,500
$3,150 - $105,500
1911-S $20 MS
$3,150
-
$144,000
$3,150 - $144,000
1912 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$114,000
$3,150 - $114,000
1913 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$192,000
$3,150 - $192,000

Visit these great CDN Sponsors

CDN Sponsors

1913-D $20 MS
$3,150
-
$78,000
$3,150 - $78,000
1913-S $20 MS
$3,150
-
$270,000
$3,150 - $270,000
1914 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$148,000
$3,150 - $148,000
1914-D $20 MS
$3,150
-
$216,000
$3,150 - $216,000
1914-S $20 MS
$3,150
-
$108,000
$3,150 - $108,000
1915 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$140,500
$3,150 - $140,500
1915-S $20 MS
$3,150
-
$81,500
$3,150 - $81,500
1916-S $20 MS
$3,150
-
$78,000
$3,150 - $78,000
1920 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$288,000
$3,150 - $288,000
1920-S $20 MS
$21,500
-
$1,094,500
$21,500 - $1,094,500
1921 $20 MS
$36,000
-
$1,320,000
$36,000 - $1,320,000
1922 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$72,000
$3,150 - $72,000
1922 $20 Tripled Die Obverse, FS-101 MS
$3,100
-
$72,000
$3,100 - $72,000
1922 $20 Doubled Die Reverse, FS-801 MS
$3,100
-
$72,000
$3,100 - $72,000
1922-S $20 MS
$3,150
-
$194,500
$3,150 - $194,500
1922-S $20 Die Gouge Through 2, FS-401 MS
$3,150
-
$194,500
$3,150 - $194,500
1923 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$108,000
$3,150 - $108,000
1923-D $20 MS
$3,150
-
$108,000
$3,150 - $108,000

Visit these great CDN Sponsors

CDN Sponsors

1924 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$108,000
$3,150 - $108,000
1924 $20 Doubled Die Obverse, FS-101 MS
$3,100
-
$7,000
$3,100 - $7,000
1924-D $20 MS
$3,300
-
$374,500
$3,300 - $374,500
1924-S $20 MS
$3,450
-
$1,200,000
$3,450 - $1,200,000
1925 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$48,000
$3,150 - $48,000
1925 $20 Doubled Die Reverse, FS-801 MS
$3,100
-
$7,000
$3,100 - $7,000
1925-D $20 MS
$3,450
-
$432,000
$3,450 - $432,000
1925-S $20 MS
$3,650
-
$780,000
$3,650 - $780,000
1926 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$84,000
$3,150 - $84,000
1926 $20 Tripled Die Obverse, FS-101 MS
$3,100
-
$8,750
$3,100 - $8,750
1926-D $20 MS
$10,000
-
$504,000
$10,000 - $504,000
1926-S $20 MS
$3,300
-
$240,000
$3,300 - $240,000
1927 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$60,000
$3,150 - $60,000
1927-D $20 MS Major Rarity
$900,000
-
$7,800,000
$900,000 - $7,800,000
1927-S $20 MS
$13,000
-
$570,000
$13,000 - $570,000
1928 $20 MS
$3,150
-
$48,000
$3,150 - $48,000
1928 $20 Doubled Die Obverse, FS-101 MS
$3,100
-
$7,000
$3,100 - $7,000
1929 $20 MS
$19,000
-
$245,000
$19,000 - $245,000
1930-S $20 MS
$31,000
-
$438,000
$31,000 - $438,000

Visit these great CDN Sponsors

CDN Sponsors

1931 $20 MS
$29,000
-
$576,000
$29,000 - $576,000
1931-D $20 MS
$38,500
-
$518,500
$38,500 - $518,500
1932 $20 MS
$36,000
-
$374,500
$36,000 - $374,500
1933 $20 MS Unique in Private Hands
$21,600,000
-
$21,600,000
$21,600,000 - $21,600,000
       

Related Stories (powered by Greysheet News)

View all news

Greysheet Catalog Details

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the $20 Saint Gaudens Gold (1907–1933) series of Pre-1933 Gold Coinage in the U.S. Coins contains 68 distinct entries with CPG® values between $3,100.00 and $21,600,000.00.
America's most beautifully designed gold coin, the Saint Gaudens Double Eagle, succeeded the long lasting Liberty Head series in 1907. The Saints then remained until the very end which was 1933 when the rein of circulating gold coinage in America came to an end. For many reasons beyond just its looks this series is certainly one of the more popularly collected gold coins in American numismatics. The attractiveness of this coin and its name came to be when Augustus Saint-Gaudens was selected to redesign certain coinage under President Theodore Roosevelt’s directive. This was not the first nor last time new designs were made on American coinage for the sole purpose of the United States wanting to have the world’s most eye appealing money. Augustus Saint-Gaudens may not be overly well-known today but at the start of the 20th century he was one of America’s most famous and skilled sculptors. Saint-Gaudens overperformed his expectations to say the very least by anyone’s standards. The new Double Eagle had a busy design with much detail yet was in no way cluttered and every part of the coin truly complimented each other. The only design change for this coin was the quick addition of the IN GOID WE TRUST Motto which has left collectors with the No Motto type 1 and the With Motto type 2. The motto was only missing for under 2 years before it was added and remained for the rest of the 25 year duration. The Saint Gaudens Double Eagle was first struck in high relief format in which those coins are without a doubt that much more bold and beautiful. Although, mass production at the time could not sustain this method of design and striking so after barely a year the dies’ relief had to be lowered. The mintage for these 1907 high reliefs was cut off at just 12,000 which would end up being the lowest mintage for the entire series. Except at the time no one expected all the melting of certain issues making this series unique in that lower mintages does not correspond with greater rarity. There were proof strikes produced for this series from 1908 through 1915 which are all extremely scarce and valuable. As for the regular business strike coins that make up most of this series, they were minted in Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco. Many issues in this series are worth just a slight premium over the gold value unless found in very high gem grades. The notable rarities in this series are numerous as all dates selected for mass melting now have astronomical numismatic value for those surviving examples. The 1933 Saint is a multimillion dollar coin and only one is legal to own in private hands. That leaves the 1927-D as the most rare date if you discount the 1933. This series has so much going for it and limitless ways for collectors and investors to acquire them.

Catalog Detail