Specifications
Mexican Gold Libertad at a glance
Composition
- Alloy
- Gold (99.9% fine)
- Color
- Warm 24k gold; large diameter for its weight
- Thickness
- 2.80 mm
- Available weights
- 1 oz, ½ oz, ¼ oz, 1/10 oz, 1/20 oz
Provenance
- Issuing mint
- Casa de Moneda de México →
- Mint location
- Mexico City, Mexico
- First minted
- 1981
- Face value
- No denomination — legal tender by weight
- Legal tender
- Yes
- IRA eligible (US)
- Yes
Source: issuing mint specifications, cross-checked against published dealer and grading-service data.
The story
History
The Gold Libertad comes from the Casa de Moneda de México, the oldest mint in the Americas, founded in 1535. Mexico has a deep numismatic heritage — its colonial-era silver "pieces of eight" were once the world's de facto reserve currency — and the modern Libertad continues that lineage.
Introduced in 1981, the Gold Libertad carries one of the most admired designs in bullion: the Winged Victory (Ángel de la Independencia) standing before the volcanoes Popocatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl. Unusually, the coin bears no face value — it is legal tender by weight, with its value floating against the gold price.
The Libertad is struck to a high standard in .999 fine gold and issued in a full range of fractional sizes. While its mintages are smaller than the Eagle or Maple Leaf — giving some issues collector appeal — it remains a recognized, liquid bullion coin, especially across the Americas.
- 1535 — Casa de Moneda de México founded — oldest mint in the Americas
- 1981 — First Gold Libertad
- Bears no face value — legal tender by weight
- Famed "Winged Victory" and twin-volcano design
The two faces
Design
The Mexican coat of arms — a golden eagle perched on a cactus, devouring a serpent — surrounded by historic national coats of arms in the ring (on modern issues).
The Winged Victory (the Angel of Independence) in a forward stride, wreath and broken chain in hand, with the volcanoes Popocatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl behind — among the most beautiful designs in modern bullion.
Coin photography: Coin12345 (CC0) — via Wikimedia Commons.
Authentication & counterfeit watch
How to spot a genuine Mexican Gold Libertad
A genuine 1 oz Gold Libertad weighs 31.10 g (pure gold), with a distinctive 34.50 mm diameter — noticeably wider than a Krugerrand or Eagle for the same weight — and 2.80 mm thickness. It is non-magnetic. The wide-format diameter is itself a quick authenticity check. The Winged Victory and the volcano relief are deeply struck on genuine coins; blurred detail or an off diameter is a red flag. Verify weight and the 34.5 mm width together, and prefer coins in original mint packaging for collector issues.
Authentication guidance is general reference, not a substitute for professional verification. For high-value purchases, buy from reputable dealers and consider professional grading.
For the investor
Investment considerations
The Libertad's .999 purity makes it IRA-eligible under US rules and accepted in high-purity markets. Its striking design and Mexican Mint provenance give it broad appeal across the Americas.
Mintages are lower than the big Western coins, so premiums can sit a touch higher and certain dates carry collector interest — a double-edged sword: appealing to collectors, slightly costlier for pure-bullion buyers. Liquidity is good in the US and Latin America, somewhat thinner in Europe and Asia than the Maple Leaf.
Note the large 34.5 mm diameter for a 1 oz coin — a deliberate design choice that some investors simply enjoy holding.
Common questions
Mexican Gold Libertad FAQ
Is the Gold Libertad IRA-eligible?
Yes. At 99.9% purity, struck by Mexico’s national mint, it meets the IRS standard and is accepted by most gold-IRA custodians.
Why does the Libertad have no face value?
By design. It is legal tender in Mexico by weight rather than a fixed denomination, so its monetary value simply tracks the gold price.
Is the Libertad a good value versus a Maple Leaf?
It’s comparable bullion at slightly higher and more variable premiums, owing to lower mintages and collector demand. For lowest cost, the Krugerrand or Maple Leaf usually win; for design and provenance, many prefer the Libertad.
Why is the coin so wide?
The 1 oz Libertad is struck on a larger 34.5 mm blank than most rivals — a deliberate aesthetic choice that makes the design more prominent.