Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

Search and identify coins from around the world — with country, denomination, metal, mint, history, and how to tell them apart.

Type II Silver Three-Cent Piece

Type II Silver Three-Cent Piece

A short-lived redesign of the silver three-cent piece with heavier silver content and an outlined star, known for weak strikes and generally low mintages.

United States
Trade Dollar

Trade Dollar

A heavier U.S. silver dollar struck specifically for trade with China and East Asia, later demonetized domestically and known for its distinctive weight-and-fineness inscription.

United States
1943 Bronze Lincoln Cent

1943 Bronze Lincoln Cent

An extremely rare mint error in which a small number of 1943 Lincoln cents were accidentally struck in leftover bronze rather than the intended wartime zinc-coated steel.

Errors & Varieties
Standing Liberty Quarter

Standing Liberty Quarter

An early 20th-century silver quarter featuring a striding figure of Liberty, prized for its artistic Type I 'bare breast' design and later modified Type II version.

United States
Mercury Dime

Mercury Dime

Popular U.S. dime nicknamed for its winged Liberty head, mistaken by many for the Roman god Mercury, designed by Adolph A. Weinman and struck from 1916 to 1945.

United States
Lincoln Wheat Cent

Lincoln Wheat Cent

The first widely circulated U.S. coin to feature a real historical figure, Abraham Lincoln, with two stylized wheat stalks on the reverse; one of the most collected coins in America.

United States
Walking Liberty Half Dollar

Walking Liberty Half Dollar

Widely admired U.S. half dollar designed by Adolph A. Weinman, depicting Liberty striding toward the sun and a bold eagle on the reverse; its obverse design was later revived for the Silver Eagle.

United States
1804 Draped Bust Silver Dollar

1804 Draped Bust Silver Dollar

Extraordinarily rare U.S. dollar known as "The King of American Coins," actually struck decades after its 1804 date for diplomatic gift sets and later collectors, with only 15 known examples.

United States
1933 Double Eagle

1933 Double Eagle

One of the rarest and most legally contested U.S. coins, struck but never officially released for circulation after the nation left the gold standard; a single example sold for over $18 million.

United States
Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle

Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle

Widely regarded as one of the most beautiful U.S. coins ever produced, designed by sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens at the urging of President Theodore Roosevelt.

United States
2021 Tuskegee Airmen America the Beautiful Quarter

2021 Tuskegee Airmen America the Beautiful Quarter

A 2021 America the Beautiful Quarter honoring the Tuskegee Airmen, the pioneering African American military pilots of World War II, at their Alabama training site.

United States
2008 Hawaii State Quarter

2008 Hawaii State Quarter

The final release of the 50 State Quarters Program, honoring Hawaii with an image of King Kamehameha I extending his hand over the Hawaiian islands.

United States
2004 Wisconsin State Quarter Extra Leaf

2004 Wisconsin State Quarter Extra Leaf

A famous modern variety of the 2004 Wisconsin state quarter showing an unexplained extra leaf on the corn cob, found in both 'low leaf' and 'high leaf' forms.

Errors & Varieties
2005 Minnesota State Quarter Extra Tree (Doubled Die)

2005 Minnesota State Quarter Extra Tree (Doubled Die)

A doubled-die variety of the 2005 Minnesota state quarter that produces the illusion of an extra tree trunk among the treeline in the design, popular with modern variety collectors.

Errors & Varieties
1858 Seated Liberty Quarter

1858 Seated Liberty Quarter

A comparatively plentiful mid-series No Motto Seated Liberty quarter, popular as an affordable entry point for collectors seeking a representative example of the type.

United States
1891 Seated Liberty Quarter

1891 Seated Liberty Quarter

The final year of the long-running Seated Liberty quarter design before it was replaced by the Barber quarter in 1892, popular as an affordable closing-date type coin.

United States
1866 Seated Liberty Quarter (Motto)

1866 Seated Liberty Quarter (Motto)

The first year the motto IN GOD WE TRUST appeared on the quarter dollar, the low-mintage 1866 Philadelphia issue is a genuine key date of the Seated Liberty series.

United States
1873-CC Seated Liberty Quarter (No Arrows)

1873-CC Seated Liberty Quarter (No Arrows)

One of the great rarities of the Seated Liberty quarter series, this tiny Carson City issue predates the mid-1873 arrows-at-date modification and survives in only a handful of known examples.

United States
1842-O Small Date Seated Liberty Quarter

1842-O Small Date Seated Liberty Quarter

A famous condition and date rarity of the Seated Liberty series, struck at New Orleans from leftover small-date dies originally prepared for Philadelphia proof coinage.

United States
1853 Seated Liberty Quarter (Arrows and Rays)

1853 Seated Liberty Quarter (Arrows and Rays)

A popular one-year Seated Liberty type marked by arrows at the date and rays around the eagle, signaling a reduction in the coin's silver weight mandated by the Coinage Act of 1853.

United States
1827 Capped Bust Quarter

1827 Capped Bust Quarter

One of the most celebrated rarities in American numismatics, the 1827 quarter exists only as extremely rare proof-like Originals and later Restrikes rather than typical circulation coinage.

United States
1805 Draped Bust Quarter

1805 Draped Bust Quarter

A far more available date than the famous 1804, the 1805 quarter is a popular representative of the Draped Bust, Heraldic Eagle type for collectors building an early American type set.

United States
1815 Capped Bust Quarter

1815 Capped Bust Quarter

The first quarter struck since 1807, the 1815 issue introduced John Reich's Capped Bust design in the large-diameter format used through 1828.

United States
1950-D/S Washington Quarter Overmintmark

1950-D/S Washington Quarter Overmintmark

A famous mid-century mintmark error where a Denver quarter die was first punched with an S mintmark and then re-punched with a D, leaving traces of both letters visible.

Errors & Varieties