The United States Mint’s 2026 Uncirculated Coin Set is already bringing strong premiums on the secondary market, with demand centered on its exclusive Philadelphia and Denver 1776 ~ 2026 Lincoln cents.

Released June 30 for $124.50 and limited to 300,000, the 20-coin set provides the only uncirculated 2026 cents from the U.S. Mint and the only examples struck at Philadelphia and Denver. Roughly 24 hours after its release, the set became unavailable, and the Mint added a “Remind Me” option for collectors seeking availability alerts.
Recent eBay sales reviewed by CoinNews show complete 2026 Mint Sets in original packaging selling from $162.50 to $250. The average price across more than 100 observed sales was $185.92, representing a typical premium of $61.42, or roughly 49.3%, above the Mint’s issue price. At the top end, some buyers paid roughly double the Mint’s original price.
P&D Cents Drive Much of the Premium
The strength of the full set is tied largely to its pair of 1776 ~ 2026 Lincoln cents. The Mint ended cent production for circulation in 2025, meaning no 2026 pennies are being struck for everyday commerce. Instead, the denomination appears only in select collector products.

Those products differ by finish and mint mark. The 2026 Mint Set offers uncirculated cents from Philadelphia and Denver. The recently released 2026 Semiquincentennial Silver Proof Set contains a proof cent from San Francisco, and the upcoming standard 2026 Proof Set will also include a San Francisco proof cent.

Secondary-market activity shows some sellers breaking Mint Sets apart. Sets containing all coins except the two Lincoln cents have sold from $49.99 to $89.99, averaging about $63.62, or $122.31 below the average price of complete sets.

Individual uncirculated cents are drawing significant prices on their own. Recent sales of a single Philadelphia- or Denver-struck cent ranged from $80 to $87.85, with an average of about $85.30. At that average, two individually sold cents would total about $170.60, approaching the observed secondary-market average for a complete Mint Set in original packaging.

1776-2026 Silver Proof Set Showed Similar Pattern
The results mirror early secondary-market activity for the 2026 Semiquincentennial Silver Proof Set, where the proof Lincoln cent quickly became one of the strongest individual components. CoinNews previously found complete Silver Proof Sets averaging about $326, roughly $81 above the Mint’s $245 issue price, while the proof cent alone averaged approximately $128.

Together, the two products show how strongly the limited 2026 Lincoln cent issues are shaping secondary-market demand, whether in proof form from San Francisco or as uncirculated examples from Philadelphia and Denver.
P, D and S Groupings Also Draw Buyers
In the past few days, some sellers also offered combined Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco groupings assembled from the uncirculated Mint Set and Silver Proof Set. Among the observed listings, a few three-cent combinations approached $300, while P, D and S dime sets sold for about $85 and similar nickel offerings brought about $33.
Those smaller combinations further point to collector interest in assembling all available 2026 mint-mark versions, particularly for denominations tied to the Mint’s limited cent production and broader Semiquincentennial program.
1776-2026 Quarters Also Draw Interest
The uncirculated set’s 10 quarters, representing the five one-year Semiquincentennial designs from both Philadelphia and Denver, have also appeared separately on the secondary market.
Recent sales for the 10-coin quarter grouping ranged from $25 to $69.95, averaging about $38.33. The quarters honor the Mayflower Compact, Revolutionary War, Declaration of Independence, U.S. Constitution and Gettysburg Address.
While those prices are modest compared with the cents, they show that other one-year-only designs in the Mint Set are attracting attention when offered apart from the full 20-coin product.
Strong Demand Despite Higher Price
The uncirculated 2026 Mint Set carries a substantially higher issue price than recent annual sets. At $124.50, it is nearly four times the $33.25 introductory price of the 2025 edition.
Even so, early secondary-market results show buyers paying well above the Mint price for complete sets, with additional premiums emerging for individual components. The combination of exclusive uncirculated cents, dual-dated anniversary coinage and a full Philadelphia-and-Denver lineup has made the set one of the more closely watched U.S. Mint products of the year.




