Direct Ship Program page
Native American Dollar Coin
One coin design will be released each year.
Not Available: Agriculture (2009)
Presidential dollar coin release schedule
Four coin designs will be released each year
Available: Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Madison, Jackson
Coins come in $250 boxes (ten rolls of $25). You can order two boxes of each design ($500) for the presidents; there is currently no apparent limit for the Sacajawea dollars. Shipping disappears once you complete the order.
This is charged as a purchase, not a cash advance. The Mint will initially authorize the entire amount. The final charge is usually made the day after the coins ship. A few folks have noted receiving partial orders; the amount may not be charged until the order ships complete.
The Mint appears to be back to matching order information. Keeping orders small (<$1000) seems to to be helpful in avoiding order matching, allowing one to order more than the item limits over time. To guarantee mismatched orders of the same item, the billing and shipping addresses, and credit card numbers must be different.
All orders from the Mint of $300 or more will ship expedited (UPS Next Day Air or Priority Mail), signature required. Bellyaching about the signature requirement in the thread is verboten.
Many have reported long (sometimes extreme) hold periods for orders. Coins also sometimes get back ordered (the website usually notes an expected ship date). Do not order with any expectation as to shipment and delivery dates. If you are planning on getting a large number of boxes, consider making separate orders of $500 or $1000. Orders appear to be filled on a rolling basis, one design at a time. Also, remember that there may be a hold for your order amount on your credit card for some time.
Due to the vagueries of the Internet, shipping notices are sometimes received the day of or after delivery. The tracking number is the third in the block on the shipping notices. The first two lines have no obvious meaning.
To check the status of your order over the phone, call 1-800-USA-MINT and select option 2. The system will ask you to input your order # and billing zip code. The order number is in both the subject line and body of the order receipt e-mail.
If you do not know your bank or credit union's policy on deposits of large amounts of coins, contact them before going. Most do not require that the coins be unrolled; however, you do need to remove them from their shipping box. Larger banks that handle commercial deposits have coin bags into which to place unrolled coins. Posters have reported adverse action from multiple institutions after making large or numerous coin deposits. Do not make large or numerous deposits at the same bank.
gatzdon said:Don't fall for any lies about coin deposit fees. If they say there's a fee, demand to get that in writing. If they refuse, tell them refusal to disclose their fees in writing is a direct violation of Regulation DD - Truth in Savings Act. Specifically Depository institutions shall make the disclosures required by §§ 230.4 through 230.6 of this part, as applicable, clearly and conspicuously, in writing, and in a form the consumer may keep. Emphasis on "in a form the consumer may keep.mothra0 said:Ask the MERCHANT TELLER how they prefer to receive rolled coin and how much they are able to take.
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Don't go to the satellite (small branch). Go to a main branch that handles lots of traffic. (I see lots of people saying the banks are lying to them when the bank tells them that they only have room for $2-$5k. For the most part, the bank is telling you the truth. The "vault" for cash operations at a bank is not the thing with the huge metal door that the bank robbers go after in the movies. That vault is for safe deposit boxes of customers who pay for them. The cash vault is usually a lot smaller...think gun safe sized. I've made enough deposits to understand the modern banking only requires a small cash vault. They can't have all the space taken up by coins. If you go to a high volume bank, then the vault will be bigger and they will most likely have armored car pickups every day. Smaller banks only get pickups one to two times a week.
Be aware of structuring. Structuring may be prosecuted whether you intend to do it or not. Avoid making numerous deposits in a short period.
For those opening many rolls for numismatic or deposit purposes, safety openers are available. This has been discussed; it is available here for 11.95 plus shipping.
If you don't think that this is a profitable deal, then don't post here about it. Between interest on float and credit card rewards, plenty of people feel that this is worth their effort. Only you can decide if it is worth yours. staci86 said:1% straight cash is very common. If you can cycle $10k per month on that, you get a free $100 plus interest on the float for a few trips to the bank. If you're at the bank anyway or bank somewhere you drive by regularly, its 10 minutes max per visit, at one of the better banks for this deal.
If you are using Schwab's 2% cash card, that becomes $200 plus interest per month.
Someone earlier in this thread posted about the Citi Platinum AMEX giving 3TYP/dollar, redeemed at 1% on the student loan rebate. That would yield $300 per month plus interest.
If you card is tiered like AMEX Blue, this deal will help you reach the upper tier and increase earnings on other purchases. If you must spend $X as part of a promo, this is a great way to meet that requirement.
This deal allows you to do fee-free balance transfers from one card to another. This can convert a 0% purchase APR into money in your checking account.
If you have large credit lines that you don't use, this cycling shows substantial activity on the account, and can help prevent a closure for inactivity. That is intangible, but still a benefit.
If you are unfortunate enough to be carrying CC interest at a non-promotional rate, and have a card which is paid off and has a grace period, you can use this deal to float that debt and avoid high normal CC rates on the portion of the balance you can continue cycling.
There are many ways to make money from this deal. If your card only yields 0.625%, you need a new card, or you need to think of other ways to make/save money from this deal.
Besides (gasp!) spending the coins or depositing into a bank account, consider using them to pay property taxes or utility bills. This is a surreptitious way of getting these onto your card when the payee does not accept credit cards or charges a fee.
When you deposit these coins, they will not go back to the Mint. If your bank does not want them, they may eventually end up at a Federal Reserve Bank. The Federal Reserve System eventually holds all non-circulating coins and bills. Currently, the Fed contracts out the handling of coins to other institutions.
The Mint makes money on this program. It costs between ten and twenty cents to produce a single dollar coin. The Mint "makes" the difference between its cost and the dollar face value; this is called seigniorage. For each box of 250 coins, the Mint gets $200 or more beyond its production cost. This is how they can afford to spend money to market and ship the coins.
In the past the presidential coins have gone in and out of stock. Each coin design has a finite production run. Once the Mint makes as many as they planned, they stop and move on to something else. For example, there will be no more George Washington dollars made. The numbers listed in below are exactly as many as have been or ever will be made. The mint will sometimes reassign coins to this program, and you can get them; but, once they are gone, they are really gone.
US Mint said:To encourage robust national circulation of $1 Coins (non-numismatic, circulation-grade coins), the United States Mint has introduced the Circulating $1 Coin Direct Ship Program. This program makes it easy for retailers, financial institutions, and other interested parties to obtain smaller quantities of $1 coins than can otherwise be obtained from the Federal Reserve.
Circulating Presidential Dollar Figures by Mint
Denver Philadelphia Total
George Washington 163,680,000 176,680,000 340,360,000
John Adams 112,140,000 112,420,000 224,560,000
Thomas Jefferson 102,810,000 100,800,000 203,610,000
James Madison 87,780,000 84,560,000 172,340,000
James Monroe 60,230,000 64,260,000 124,490,000
John Quincy Adams 57,720,000 57,540,000 115,260,000
Andrew Jackson 61,070,000 61,180,000 122,250,000
Martin Van Buren 50,960,000 51,520,000 102,480,000
William Henry Harrison 55,160,000 43,260,000 98,420,000
751,550,000 752,220,000 1,503,770,000