Options
Why would vending machines not accept halves/dollar coins?

Was at a nearby ski slope recently and noticed that all the Coke machines had a little sign posted above the coin slot saying 50 cent and $1 coins not accepted. These are newer looking machines and they also accept bills. Why would they not accept all coins?
0
Comments
42/92
I think bottom line is it is not worth the added cost to accept a coin that is not widely circulating. You'll see for more that take dollars than halves.
They employ hundreds of workers, and the company has alot of pull in Washington, DC.
I too would like to see the elimination of the Dollar bill, so that the public would be forced to accept the new Dollar coin.
When the design on the Half Dollar changed in 1964, to honor JFK, everyone hoarded them. Noone spent one, as everyone believed them to be somewhat rare. The half dollar use to be the work horse coin in our society; now, its the Quarter Dollar.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !
New Barber Purchases
-KHayse
It's funny how our commonly-used largest units of money have gotten smaller (i.e., quarters, $100 bills), though they buy less and less.
President, Racine Numismatic Society 2013-2014; Variety Resource Dimes; See 6/8/12 CDN for my article on Winged Liberty Dimes; Ebay
was no need to accept larger coins which would necessitate having more money in them
and present a greater prize to thieves. By the time a half was needed they were no longer
in circulation. In 1979 many machines were converted to accept the new dollar coin but it
was not paid out by banks so consumers didn't have these to spend either.
When the sac was issued most vending companies took a wait and see posture.
Many of the machines still in use require more extensive modification to accept a half dollar
because the slot and change mechanism won't handle a coin of this size. I'd guess the
machine you saw was a newer one which has a larger slot into which a half dollar would fit.