The story behind the coin
Most U.S. commemorative coins honor a person, a place, or an anniversary. This one honored a fight — and the people still in it.
The Breast Cancer Awareness Commemorative Coin Act became law on April 29, 2016 (Public Law 114-148). It told the Mint to strike three coins for a single year, 2018: a five-dollar gold piece, this silver dollar, and a clad half dollar. Each one carried a built-in surcharge — $10 on every silver dollar — paid to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation in New York to fund research. That is the quiet engine inside every modern U.S. commemorative: you are not just buying a coin, you are routing money to a cause Congress chose.
The program is best remembered for the gold coin, which the law required to be alloyed with extra copper. The result was a faint pink blush — the first "pink gold" coin in the Mint's history. The silver dollar didn't share that trick. What it shared was the design, and the design is the reason this coin is worth a second look.