The United States Mint (Mint) designs for the 2026 American Innovation $1 Coin Program – featuring Steve Jobs

Courtesy: US MINT

Steve Jobs on money? It may be closer than you think.

The U.S. Treasury Department has taken the next step toward introducing a 2026 commemorative $1 coin featuring a younger version of Apple founder Steve Jobs.

The Treasury’s move is in part due to bipartisan legislation passed by Congress in 2020, and signed by Trump in his first term, that the Treasury Secretary was given authority to issue one-dollar commemorative coins during the 2026 calendar year that would be “emblematic of the United States semiquincentennial.” As the Nation’s sole manufacturer of legal tender, the mint is responsible for producing circulating currency for the Nation to conduct its trade and commerce.

The department’s authority to mint collectible coins for special national occasions like this, are part of a long tradition of special-edition currency, ranging from honoring the Constitution to celebrating the U.S. hosted Olympic Games.

According to internal concept drafts, the design presents a young Steve Jobs sitting in front of a northern California landscape of oak-covered rolling hills. His posture is captured in a moment of reflection, showing how this environment inspired his vision. Inscriptions are “UNITED STATES OF AMERICA” and “CALIFORNIA.” Additional inscriptions are “STEVE JOBS” and “MAKE SOMETHING WONDERFUL.”

If finalized, the Steve jobs coin would mark a rare occasion in which a major U.S. currency design celebrated a modern-era entrepreneur rather than a president or statesman—an acknowledgment of how Jobs innovation and technology have come to define American identity.

SAN FRANCISCO – JANUARY 11: Apple CEO Steve Jobs delivers a keynote address at the 2005 Macworld Expo January 11, 2005 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

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The Coin Market: History and Economics

Commemorative coins have historically stirred both patriotism and profit while becoming a barometer of public sentiment through collector enthusiasm and sales. These $1 Coins can sell for $13.00 and up.

  • The 1986 Statue of Liberty coin sold nearly 15.5 million units, making it the best-selling commemorative coin of all time.
  • The 1982 George Washington half dollar sold 7.1 million coins.
  • The 1983 U.S. Olympic coins sold over 5 million units.
  • The 1987 U.S. bicentennial Constitution coin sales topped 4 million.

And for a nation built on invention, there may be no more fitting face for its dollar—if only for a moment—than the man who taught the world to “Think Different.”


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