Filter By
Now Shopping by
  1. Family
    Terra
  2. Family
    Silver Panda
  3. Gift Guide
    No
Family
  1. 2019 Eagles 5items
  2. America the Beautiful 2items
  3. American Legion 1item
  4. American Liberty 1item
  5. Ancient Coin 6items
  6. Angel 2items
  7. Aztec 4items
  8. Back To The Future 1item
  9. Barber 4items
  10. Barber Dragon 1item
  11. Baseball 1item
  12. Basketball - HOF Series 2items
  13. Beard Token 1item
  14. Big 5 32items
  15. Blue Marble 2items
  16. Britannia 26items
  17. Bullet 3items
  18. Buffalo 36items
  19. Bulk Bags 9items
  20. Cent 29items
  21. Civil War 2items
  22. Classic Superheroes 5items
  23. Coat of Arms 1item
  24. Coca-Cola 5items
  25. Cold Enamel 2items
  26. Commemorative 96items
  27. Confederate Note 5items
  28. Currency Proof 3items
  29. DC Comics 7items
  30. Dime 15items
  31. Disney 5items
  32. Dragon 19items
  33. Eisenhower 9items
  34. Elephant 1item
  35. Equilibrium 1item
  36. Faces of the Empire 1item
  37. Forbidden City 1item
  38. Franklin 7items
  39. Game of Thrones 3items
  40. Germania 16items
  41. Gods of Olympus 2items
  42. Gold Bar 23items
  43. Gold Eagle 60items
  44. Gold Panda 12items
  45. Gold Saint Gaudens 1item
  46. Graded Silver Eagles 45items
  47. Harry Potter 7items
  48. Holiday 4items
  49. Horse 2items
  50. Hunters by the Night 3items
  51. Indian Head 16items
  52. Innovation Dollar 5items
  53. James Bond 4items
  54. Kangaroo 14items
  55. Kennedy 14items
  56. King Charles III Coronation 4items
  57. Koala 4items
  58. Kookaburra 3items
  59. Krugerrand 26items
  60. Large Cent 4items
  61. Legacy of Egypt 3items
  62. Legacy of the Pharaohs 1item
  63. Legends of Music 4items
  64. Libertad 1item
  65. Liberty Head 18items
  66. Lunar 10items
  67. Maple Leaf 24items
  68. Mandalorian 1item
  69. Marvel 4items
  70. Mayflower 1item
  71. Mint Set 65items
  72. Moon Panda 8items
  73. Morgan Dollar 270items
  74. Mythical Creatures 7items
  75. National Park 3items
  76. Native American 8items
  77. Native American Dollar 1item
  78. New Hampshire Goldbacks 8items
  79. Nevada Goldbacks 7items
  80. Nickel 12items
  81. Norse Gods 4items
  82. Oglala Sioux 8items
  83. Olympic 3items
  84. Paper Currency 68items
  85. Panda 49items
  86. Peace Dollar 47items
  87. Peace & Liberty 1item
  88. PEZ 1item
  89. Philharmonic 4items
  90. Presidential 3items
  91. Presidential Medal 19items
  92. Pride of Two Nations 2items
  93. Proof Set 106items
  94. Quokka 2items
  95. Religious 3items
  96. Robbins Medal 2items
  97. Royal Family 1item
  98. Sacagawea 2items
  99. Seated Liberty 6items
  100. Shipwreck 2items
  101. Shrek 1item
  102. Silver Bar 35items
  103. Silver Round 38items
  104. Silver Eagle 265items
  105. Silver Eagle Congratulations Set 4items
  106. Silver Panda 34items
  107. Silver Proof Set 9items
  108. Sitting Bull 1item
  109. Smithsonian Classics 1item
  110. Smithsonian Institution 5items
  111. Sovereign 5items
  112. Stamp 2items
  113. Standing Liberty 7items
  114. Star Wars 17items
  115. Statue of Liberty 1item
  116. Steampunk 1item
  117. Street Fighter 5items
  118. Susan B Anthony 5items
  119. Terra 0items
  120. The Mandalorian 1item
  121. Themed 3items
  122. Three Cent 1item
  123. Token 1item
  124. Tower of London 3items
  125. Trade Dollar 7items
  126. Trump 1item
  127. Tudor Beasts 3items
  128. Una & the Lion 9items
  129. Unicorn Vault Protector 1item
  130. U.S. Armed Forces 6items
  131. U.S. Mint Sets 6items
  132. VE Day 1item
  133. Walking Liberty 20items
  134. Washington Quarter 9items
  135. Wedge-Tailed Eagle 19items
  136. Wild West 1item
  137. Wombat 2items
  138. World War I 2items
  139. World War II 3items
  140. Year of the Ox 5items
  141. Year of the Tiger 4items
  142. Batman 1item
  143. Mercury Dime 2items
  144. National Purple Heart Hall of Honor 2items
  145. Platinum Jubilee 1item
  146. Dragons of the World Series 11items
  147. Queen's Memorial 9items
  148. Space Themed 7items
  149. Liberty & Britannia 10items
  150. Mercanti Lion & Eagle 3items
Price
$
-

The first-year 1982 Gold Panda displays the iconic image of a single Panda nibbling bamboo. This singular design became the model for all subsequent Panda coins, with every new design featuring China’s most famous animal. In another first for the China Mint, the dies for the Pandas were highly polished, producing a frosted effect on selective parts of the Panda to replicate its black and white fur. 

From the Bamboo Forests of China to Collections Around the World Since their introduction more than 35 years ago, the China Panda series has been a favorite of collectors around the world, renowned for its attractive one-year-only designs and limited mintages. From the first Gold Panda came Pandas struck in Silver, Platinum, Palladium and more; special “Show Pandas” struck to commemorate specific coin shows held around the world; and even creative sphere- and cube-shaped numismatic pieces that celebrate the series. 

The China Panda has a legacy that will continue for generations—and considering how hot the China market is right now, the excitement surrounding this series may last just as long. 

The China Panda Makes Its Debut
The first Chinese Gold Panda was issued in 1982. According to China Panda expert Peter Anthony, author of Gold & Silver Panda Coin Buyer’s Guide, the series was not always intended to feature the Panda. Though the animal is synonymous with China to the outside world, a variety of designs from numerous artists were considered by the China Mint. There may have been influence from a foreign filmmaker who had filmed the animals and lobbied the Mint to put them onto coins, but the true reasons behind the decision remain a mystery. What we do know is that the winning design came courtesy of Mr. Chen Jian, who had previously designed popular coins like the 1979 Year of the Child and 1980 Olympics archer. When asked, Mr. Chen said he had no idea that his simple Panda design would become recognized by collectors around the world. 

One-Year-Only Designs Meet Constant Quality
Joined by the Silver Panda in 1983, the China Panda Series would eventually be struck in 99.9% pure gold and silver. However, the Silver Panda was first struck in 90%, then 92.5% fineness before landing on 99.9% fineness in 1989, when the coin also went from having a 38.6 mm diameter to its standard 40 mm diameter. Unlike the annually changing, one-year-only reverse designs, the obverse sides of China Panda coins have always shared the same image: the Hall of Prayer for Abundant Harvests, the main building of the Temple of Heaven. Above is “People’s Republic of China” inscribed in Chinese, along with the coin’s date of issue. From the ´90s to the newest designs, this obverse displays the transition from early hand-engraving to machine engraving. 

Why the Temple of Heaven?
For most of the world, the most recognizable and powerful symbol of China is the Great Wall, an ancient series of walls and fortifications built across the northern borders of China between the fourth century B.C. and 1644. So why the Temple of Heaven? Though the Great Wall was considered for the China Panda obverse, the mint chose the Temple of Heaven due to its unique symbolic meanings. The Hall of Prayer for Abundant Harvests has represented the good weather and, as its name suggests, abundant harvests in Chinese culture for hundreds of years. By using the temple as the obverse for the China Panda, the coins themselves are shown as being minted for love and good wishes. 

Major China Panda Milestones 

1982: The World’s First Gold Panda
In 1982, the China Mint struck its very first Gold Panda. It was a trial release, and soon became a massive hit with collectors. Designed by Shanghai artist Chen Jian, this coin bears a rather minimalist image of a Panda playfully enjoying a bamboo treat. 

1983: The World’s First Silver Panda
Struck in 27 grams of 90% silver, the first Silver Panda was struck with a mirrored Proof finish. The design of a mother Panda feeding her son comes from designer Yu Min, and won the “Best Silver Coin of 1983” award. 

1987 & 1989: Beyond Gold and Silver
In 1987, Chen Jian returned to design the first-ever Platinum Panda. Two years later, the first Palladium Panda was minted in response to the massive increase in Palladium values. Both were struck in extremely limited quantities, leaving Gold and Silver as the top sellers in the China Panda series. 

1989: Meet the New Silver Bullion Panda
1989 also saw the first non-proof Silver Panda coins. These Brilliant Uncirculated bullion pieces had a relatively massive mintage of a quarter-million pieces, and were quickly snapped up by collectors. Purity, weight and diameter all increased to what they are today—and the maximum mintage continues to rise! 

2016: Enter the Metric System
In 2016, the series transitioned from imperial units (ounces) to metric units (grams). Rather than being struck in one Troy ounce, the flagship Gold and Silver Pandas were struck in 30 grams of 99.9% gold or silver. The change proved immensely popular, and the mint has never ooked back. 

2019: A Secret Revealed
Thanks to a surprising discovery, collectors in 2019 were finally able to secure full coin sets graded and sealed with labels identifying their mint of origin—a mystery that has frustrated collectors for decades, as the China Mint does not use mint marks to identify where each coin was struck! 

2019 is also the first time that the China Mint revealed the Panda Coin Design a few weeks ahead of the official release. From the 2019 design, the Mint started a ten-year Panda coin design series. 

Struck at Three China Mints 

There are several mints that produce the China Panda series. The Shenyang and Shanghai Mints were the first to strike the coins. In 1998, the Shenzhen Guobao Mint also began production on the China Panda series, However, unlike most coins struck by the U.S. Mint, Chinese Mints do not use mint marks to identify where each coin was struck.

Shenyang Mint
Of the three Chinese government mints that strike China Panda coins, the Shenyang Mint has the longest history. Founded by the Qing Dynasty in 1896, Shenyang remains the largest mint in China to produce circulating and commemorative coins and bars. Renowned for its advanced technology and world-class designers, the Shenyang Mint produces half of all modern Chinese coins. In 1982, the mint struck the first-ever Chinese coin to win an international award. 

Shanghai Mint
The Shanghai Mint began operations in 1920. One of the most important mints in China, Shanghai’s main building is a replica of the U.S. Mint facility in Philadelphia. Appropriate, as the Shanghai Mint used striking machines previously used by Philadelphia. Today, the Shanghai Mint is known as the producer of the legendary China Panda Series, the Dragon & Phoenix series and the popular Chinese Lunar coins. In 2008, many master artists and engravers came together in Shanghai to strike the gold, silver and bronze medals for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, which featured rings of jade. 

Shenzhen Mint
While many collectors are not directly familiar with the name of the Shenzhen Guobao Mint, they are certainly familiar with the coins and commemoratives this mint has struck. The Shenzhen Mint now strikes more China Panda coins than any other Chinese mint, as well as a wide variety of other coins and commemoratives, including the Moon Festival Panda series and “Show Panda” coins struck for coin shows around the world.