So far the U.S. Mint hasn't made any changes.
Yearly Morgan/Peace Dollar so far up from 2021-2025 until this year in 2026:
Proof
Uncirculated
Two-Coin Set (Reverse Proof)
The issue this year is:

The Uncirculated is Enhanced Uncirculated Coin. (West Point in 2026, normally in Philadelphia)

The Proof is the Reverse Proof Coin (Philadelphia in 2026, normally in San Francisco)

The Two-Coin Set is not labeled as Reverse Proof but Standard Proof (Philadelphia in 2026, normally in San Francisco)
This year in 2026, the mint creating the coins changed and the strikes are different from the previous years in how it is sold.
I have the mintage/sales figures from the latest data released by the U.S. Mint. It's still pretty popular comparing on how much is sold, but decreasing yearly. Hopefully the change in the strikes will improve the sales figure.

According to the law that authorized the Morgan and
Peace dollars:
https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th...e?format=txtThe U.S. Mint has to release yearly Morgan and
Peace dollars. It does not say it has to release the proof/uncirculated/reverse proof, but only yearly like the original according to
(a) Design Requirements section.
This part states that it must be minted, but doesn't say an end date, so it must be continued yearly.
Quote:
(6) These iconic silver dollars with vastly different
representations of Lady Liberty and the American Eagle, reflect
a changing of the guard in 1921 in the United States and
therefore on the 100th anniversary must begin to be minted again
to commemorate this significant evolution of American freedom.
This part uses the word "shall", in legal terms, it must be enforced. What I learned in law enforcement, especially in Texas, there are only two penal code that uses the word "shall" and we must enforce it no matter what. All other penal code, we have discretion on enforcement.
Quote:(a) $1 Silver Coins.--The Secretary of the Treasury (hereafter in
this Act referred to as the ``Secretary'') shall mint and issue $1 coins
in recognition of the 100th anniversary of completion of coinage of the
Morgan dollar and the 100th anniversary of commencement of coinage of
the
Peace dollar, each of which shall--
(1) weigh 26.73 grams;
(2) have a diameter of 1.500 inches;
(3) contain not less than 90 percent silver; and
(4) have a reeded edge.
So will we get six yearly? No, because the law does not specifically say it. We will get two yearly at the minimum, anything more than that is because the U.S. Mint wants to.