Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Brasher Doubloon

Brasher Doubloon

A famous privately struck gold coin made in 1787 by New York goldsmith Ephraim Brasher, a neighbor of George Washington, and one of the most valuable and celebrated coins in American numismatics.

United States
Type 3 Indian Princess Gold Dollar

Type 3 Indian Princess Gold Dollar

The final and longest-running design of the U.S. gold dollar, featuring a larger, better-struck Native American princess portrait than its short-lived Type 2 predecessor.

United States
Indian Head Gold Eagle ($10)

Indian Head Gold Eagle ($10)

A striking early 20th-century $10 gold coin designed under President Theodore Roosevelt's coinage renaissance, featuring an incuse (recessed) design and a Native American-style Liberty portrait.

United States
Colombian 8 Escudos Gold (Popayán)

Colombian 8 Escudos Gold (Popayán)

A large colonial gold doubloon struck at the historic Popayán mint in present-day Colombia, prized by collectors as one of the classic Spanish colonial gold coins of South America.

Latin American
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
Classic Head Half Eagle ($5)

Classic Head Half Eagle ($5)

A short-lived early American gold five-dollar coin created after the Coinage Act of 1834 reduced gold coin weight to keep coins in circulation rather than being melted.

United States
Wood's Hibernia Halfpenny

Wood's Hibernia Halfpenny

A British copper coinage patented by William Wood for Ireland, controversially rejected there but widely circulated instead in colonial America, where large surplus shipments ended up in everyday trade.

United States
Capped Bust Half Dime

Capped Bust Half Dime

Struck between 1829 and 1837, the Capped Bust Half Dime brought a smaller, mechanically consistent version of the Capped Bust design to America's smallest silver coin.

United States
Bolivia 8 Reales (Potosi Mint)

Bolivia 8 Reales (Potosi Mint)

A major Spanish colonial and early Bolivian silver dollar struck at the legendary Potosí mint, fed by the immense silver deposits of the Cerro Rico mountain.

Latin American
George V Fifty Cents

George V Fifty Cents

Canada's fifty-cent silver coin issued under King George V, spanning a reduction in silver fineness in 1920 and including the famously rare 1921 date.

Canadian
Joachimsthaler

Joachimsthaler

Struck beginning in 1520 in the Bohemian silver-mining town of Joachimsthal, this large silver coin gave its name, shortened to 'thaler' and later 'dollar,' to countless currencies around the world.

European
Seated Liberty Dollar

Seated Liberty Dollar

A mid-19th century silver dollar depicting Liberty seated on a rock, the standard large silver dollar of the United States before the Trade dollar and Morgan dollar.

United States
French 5 Francs "Napoleon"

French 5 Francs "Napoleon"

A large silver crown-sized coin bearing the portrait of Napoleon Bonaparte, first as First Consul and later as Emperor, marking France's decimal franc system's early flagship silver denomination.

European
Nero Denarius

Nero Denarius

The silver coin of the notorious emperor Nero, whose AD 64 currency reform slightly reduced the denarius's silver content and weight, a step in the long history of Roman debasement.

Ancient
French Indochina Sarraut Piastre (1931)

French Indochina Sarraut Piastre (1931)

A reduced-weight silver piastre introduced in 1931 for French Indochina after rising world silver prices made the older, larger trade piastre worth more in bullion than in face value.

Asian
Yuan Shikai 'Fatman' Dollar (1914)

Yuan Shikai 'Fatman' Dollar (1914)

A widely produced Republic of China silver dollar bearing the portrait of President Yuan Shikai, nicknamed the fat man dollar for his portly likeness, one of the most common historic Chinese silver coins.

Asian
Maundy Twopence

Maundy Twopence

A small silver twopence struck each year as part of the Royal Maundy set, historically descended from the medieval silver half groat and still distributed in the annual royal alms ceremony.

British
Australian Holey Dollar and Dump

Australian Holey Dollar and Dump

In 1813, colonial authorities in New South Wales punched the centers out of Spanish silver dollars to create two coins from one, easing a severe coin shortage while preventing the silver from leaving the colony.

Africa & Oceania
Liberty Head Quarter Eagle ($2.50)

Liberty Head Quarter Eagle ($2.50)

A small 19th-century gold coin featuring Christian Gobrecht's Coronet Head design, minted across many branch facilities during America's gold rush era.

United States
1795 Liberty Cap Large Cent

1795 Liberty Cap Large Cent

An early United States large cent from 1795 featuring the Liberty Cap design, struck as America's young Mint worked out production and metal-supply challenges.

United States
1907 High Relief Double Eagle

1907 High Relief Double Eagle

Sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens' original, dramatically high-relief double eagle design, struck in limited numbers in 1907 before being flattened for mass production; widely called America's most beautiful coin.

United States
Italian Scudo (Papal States)

Italian Scudo (Papal States)

A large silver coin issued by the Papal States under successive popes, blending religious imagery with the temporal authority of the papacy.

European
Norwegian Speciedaler

Norwegian Speciedaler

Norway's principal silver coin from the establishment of its independent currency in 1816 until the krone reform of the 1870s.

European
Capped Bust Right Half Eagle

Capped Bust Right Half Eagle

America's first five-dollar gold coin, struck 1795-1807 with Liberty facing right under a soft cap, first paired with a small perched eagle reverse and later a bold heraldic eagle.

United States