25th Anniversary of 9/11 Commemorative Coin Act
Sponsored By: Representative Goldman (NY)
Introduced
Summary
Would create two commemorative coins marking the 25th anniversary of the September 11 attacks and raise funds for the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. The bill would direct the Secretary of the Treasury to mint up to 50,000 $5 gold coins and up to 400,000 $1 silver coins. Each coin would be at least 90 percent precious metal, meet specific weight and size specs, be legal tender, and be offered in uncirculated and proof qualities. Designs would honor victims, first responders, and survivors and include required inscriptions such as Liberty, In God We Trust, United States of America, E Pluribus Unum, and 25th Anniversary, with at least one coin bearing the inscription “Never Forget.” Sales would include a $35 surcharge on each gold coin and a $10 surcharge on each silver coin to support the museum. Issuance would be limited to the one-year period beginning January 1, 2027, and coins would be struck at the U.S. Mint in West Point to the greatest extent possible, with the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee and the Commission of Fine Arts consulted on designs. *It would be structured to result in no net cost to the federal government.*
Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Limited 2027 9/11 coins for collectors
If enacted, the Mint would offer two 9/11 coins for one year starting January 1, 2027. Up to 50,000 $5 gold coins and 400,000 $1 silver coins could be made. The gold coin would be 8.359 grams, 0.850 inches wide, and at least 90% gold. The silver coin would be 26.73 grams, 1.500 inches wide, and at least 90% silver. The coins would be legal tender and treated as numismatic items.
Coin surcharges fund 9/11 Museum
If enacted, each coin’s price would equal face value plus a surcharge and the Mint’s design and issuing costs. The surcharge would be $35 for each $5 gold coin and $10 for each $1 silver coin. Surcharges would support the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, but only after Treasury recovers all program costs. The program would have to run at no net cost to the federal government. Bulk and prepaid orders could get a reasonable discount. A surcharge could not be added if doing so would break the annual two‑program limit for commemorative coins. These rules would apply during the one‑year sales window starting January 1, 2027.
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Goldman (NY)
NY • D
Cosponsors
Garbarino
NY • R
Sponsored 3/10/2025
Lawler
NY • R
Sponsored 3/10/2025
Nadler
NY • D
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Latimer
NY • D
Sponsored 3/10/2025
Tenney
NY • R
Sponsored 3/10/2025
Malliotakis
NY • R
Sponsored 3/10/2025
Carson
IN • D
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McGovern
MA • D
Sponsored 3/10/2025
Lynch
MA • D
Sponsored 3/10/2025
Magaziner
RI • D
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Kennedy (NY)
NY • D
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Langworthy
NY • R
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Gottheimer
NJ • D
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Suozzi
NY • D
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Thompson (MS)
MS • D
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McIver
NJ • D
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Torres (NY)
NY • D
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Mannion
NY • D
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Del. Norton, Eleanor Holmes [D-DC-At Large]
DC • D
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Gillen
NY • D
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Watson Coleman
NJ • D
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Ryan
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Kean
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Miller-Meeks
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Tonko
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Carbajal
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Correa
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Valadao
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Beatty
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Fitzpatrick
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Menendez
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Torres (CA)
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Brownley
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Wittman
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Krishnamoorthi
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Sherrill
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Davis (NC)
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Hayes
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Calvert
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Vargas
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Schakowsky
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Rutherford
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Craig
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Kiley (CA)
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Schneider
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Meng
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Neal
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Norcross
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Van Drew
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Ocasio-Cortez
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Womack
AR • R
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Takano
CA • D
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Friedman
CA • D
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Moulton
MA • D
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Velazquez
NY • D
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Fields
LA • D
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Jackson (IL)
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Williams (GA)
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Johnson (GA)
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Riley (NY)
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Ciscomani
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Green (TN)
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Kustoff
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Casten
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Foster
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Doggett
TX • D
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Deluzio
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Clarke (NY)
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Lieu
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Evans (PA)
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Yakym
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Pou
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Del. Radewagen, Aumua Amata Coleman [R-AS-At Large]
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Sewell
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Garcia (TX)
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Espaillat
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Bishop
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Carey
OH • R
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Mullin
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Whitesides
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Salazar
FL • R
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Rescom. Hernández, Pablo Jose [D-PR-At Large]
PR • D
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Sessions
TX • R
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Meuser
PA • R
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Stefanik
NY • R
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LaLota
NY • R
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Figures
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Meeks
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Keating
MA • D
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Boyle (PA)
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Wasserman Schultz
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Chu
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McDowell
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Luna
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Stevens
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Pallone
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Morelle
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Jeffries
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Pappas
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Scott (VA)
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Hoyle (OR)
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Dean (PA)
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Scanlon
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Dingell
MI • D
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Wilson (SC)
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DeLauro
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Davis (IL)
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Min
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Buchanan
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Bell
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McCaul
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Harder (CA)
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Lee (PA)
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Guest
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Khanna
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Crane
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Walberg
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Fulcher
ID • R
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Scott, David
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