Keep America Great 2020 Coin

Keep America Great 2020 Coin

Same design, different money. One is official. One is a souvenir. One is real silver. One is just plating. A coin price checker keeps you from paying collector premium for a trinket.

Trump pieces make this confusion easy on purpose. Slap “Keep America Great” on a round, add an eagle, cut a reeded edge, and it becomes important. The slogan has its own power. 

“To all Americans tonight… we will make America strong again… proud again… safe again. And we will make America great again.” 
— Donald J. Trump, 45th and 47th President of the United States
July 21, 2016 (RNC Acceptance Speech)

What Is the 2020 Keep America Great Coin?

It is a privately minted medal/token, not an official U.S. Mint coin and not U.S. legal tender.

What is it usually? A common version is cataloged as a “Donald Trump (Keep America Great)” medal with:

  • Obverse text: “KEEP AMERICA GREAT / IN GOD WE TRUST / 2020” around a left-facing Trump portrait

  • Reverse text: “COMMANDER IN CHIEF / DONALD J. TRUMP” with an eagle-and-shield design

  • Often a reeded edge (to look more “coin-like”).

Why do sellers call it a coin? Because it is round, reeded, and sized like a collectible challenge coin. But without a denomination and without U.S. Mint issuance, it is a medal/token in numismatic terms. 

Do not confuse it with the official Mint Trump medal! 

The U.S. Mint separately sells an official Donald J. Trump Bronze Medal (also not legal tender), which is a different product line. 

Keep America Great 2020 Silver Coin

.999 Silver Round

Some pieces are marketed as 1 oz .999 fine silver rounds. They are not U.S. legal tender, even if the design copies coin-style elements. You will see them sold as “1 oz .999 silver” in listings and auction lots.

Its value today is mostly silver spot + a collectible/novelty premium. If it is truly 1 troy ounce .999, the floor is melt (1 oz of silver), and the extra depends on demand, condition, capsule/packaging, and whether it is a known private-mint series.

Silver-Colored Token

A very common piece is cataloged as a medal/token (reeded edge, Trump portrait, eagle reverse). Many of these are plated or base metal, even when sellers call them silver.

Here memorabilia pricing exists, usually far below what 1 oz of real silver would justify.

Check how to tell if a coin is silver.

keep america great 2020 silver coin examples

Keep America Great 2020 Gold Coin

A listed type is cataloged as a 2020 Trump “Keep America Great” medal with a gold (.999) plated composition, 40 mm diameter, and 24 g weight.

Another common “Keep America Great” design shows the Trump bust with “KEEP AMERICA GREAT / IN GOD WE TRUST / 2020” and an eagle reverse with “COMMANDER IN CHIEF / DONALD J. TRUMP.”

Many sellers describe these as “24K gold plated” collectibles. That usually means a thin layer of gold over base metal. It is priced like memorabilia, not bullion.

If it is real gold, it should clearly state fineness (like .9999) and a gold weight (for example, “1 oz fine gold”) from a known private mint, plus a matching certificate. If the piece only says “24K gold plated/clad,” treat it as plated. 

Check how to test the purity of a coin.

Donald Trump Coin 2020 Gold Plated Coin

2020 Keep America Great Coin Value

These are private medals/rounds, so the value depends on what version you have.


What you have

Keep America Great 2020 coin value (USD)

Gold-plated / “gold clad” challenge coin 

$4–$15

Silver-color token 

$3–$12

1 oz .999 silver round

$85–$140 

“Limited mintage” colorized/COA silver coin 

$90–$200+


How to price yours in one minute:

  • If it does not say “.999” and “1 oz”: treat it as a token (memorabilia pricing).

  • If it does say “.999” and “1 oz / 1 ozt”: start from today’s silver spot and add a premium based on packaging and how “collectible” that exact design is. 

Are These Coins Official U.S. Issues?

“Keep America Great 2020” Trump coins are not official U.S. Mint coinage and they are not U.S. legal tender. They are private tokens sold as political memorabilia.

The only “official U.S.” Trump numismatic product you will commonly see is the U.S. Mint’s Donald J. Trump Bronze Medal (still not a coin, and still not legal tender).

U.S. Mint’s Donald J. Trump Bronze Medal graded by NGC

How Much Is a Keep America Great Coin Worth?

The price is driven by memorabilia demand, not by a coin catalog. Typical value ranges might be:

  • Common plated/base-metal versions: $3–$15 is the normal zone.

  • If it is real silver (.999, 1 oz): value is usually silver spot + a premium.

  • If it is a real Keep America Great 2020 - gold coin (rare; clearly marked with weight + fineness): value is gold spot + premium (most listings are just plated).

Collector Demand and Resale Market

Two Different Markets

Collector demand splits immediately. The only widely recognized official Trump item from the U.S. Mint is the Donald J. Trump Bronze Medal (Presidential Medals program). Coin World reported the Mint quietly posted it for sale on November 25, 2020, and the product remains listed by the Mint today.

By contrast, most “Keep America Great 2020” pieces are private medals/tokens that look coin-like but are not legal tender and do not have official mint records. Numista catalogs multiple “Keep America Great” medal variants with the familiar Trump bust and eagle reverse.

Trump 2020 Commemorative Coin Keep America Great

What Actually Sells

For the private Keep America Great 2020 medals, the resale market behaves like inexpensive memorabilia. Typical asking prices cluster around single digits to low teens on large marketplaces, because supply is wide and versions are similar.

The official U.S. Mint bronze medal sits in a different lane. The Mint itself lists it at $45 to $160 depending on size/option, which effectively anchors the secondary market for unopened pieces.

Silver and Bullion Versions

When a “Keep America Great 2020” item is genuinely 1 oz .999 silver, demand shifts from memorabilia to metal-plus-premium. That is why real-silver rounds can hold far higher resale value than plated pieces, even when the design is similar.

What Drives Spikes and Drops

The private-medal market moves on attention cycles—election seasons, headlines, and gift buying—so you will see brief surges, then a return to the usual low range. Official Mint items track more like mainstream numismatics: steady collector interest, clearer product identity, and easier comparison shopping, as the listings are stable and documented.

Related Coin Value Guides