Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Barber Dime

Barber Dime

A late-19th and early-20th century silver dime designed by Charles E. Barber, featuring a classical Liberty head, part of a matching set with the Barber quarter and half dollar.

United States
1849 Double Eagle

1849 Double Eagle

A unique pattern coin, the very first double eagle ever struck by the U.S. Mint, made to test the newly authorized twenty-dollar denomination; the sole surviving example is held by the Smithsonian.

United States
Danish Speciedaler

Danish Speciedaler

Denmark's large silver 'species dollar,' the principal high-value coin of the Danish monetary system before the krone replaced it in 1873–75.

European
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
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
1804 Draped Bust Eagle

1804 Draped Bust Eagle

The final date of the original ten-dollar gold eagle series before a 33-year production halt, later followed by a small number of 1834 diplomatic-gift restrikes made using a similarly dated die.

United States
Indian Head Half Eagle ($5)

Indian Head Half Eagle ($5)

A uniquely designed gold five-dollar coin featuring an incuse (recessed) design by Bela Lyon Pratt, the only U.S. circulating coin ever struck this way.

United States
Reichsthaler

Reichsthaler

The standard large silver coin of the Holy Roman Empire and its constituent German states from the 16th century onward, whose name is the direct linguistic ancestor of the word 'dollar.'

European
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
Ecuador Sucre Silver

Ecuador Sucre Silver

Ecuador's historic silver one-sucre coin, named after independence hero Antonio Jose de Sucre, circulated for decades before Ecuador's currency was eventually replaced by the US dollar.

Latin American
Draped Bust Eagle

Draped Bust Eagle

The formal catalog name for the first U.S. ten-dollar gold coin once it adopted a bold heraldic eagle reverse in 1797, the same coin popularly nicknamed the 'Turban Head' eagle.

United States
New Zealand Lord of the Rings Coins (2003)

New Zealand Lord of the Rings Coins (2003)

New Zealand issued legal-tender coins featuring characters and scenes from Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings film trilogy, celebrating the films' production in the country with both a circulating dollar and premium collector coins.

Commemorative
1913-S Barber Quarter

1913-S Barber Quarter

A famous low-mintage key date near the end of the Barber quarter series, prized by collectors despite its worn survivors due to its very small original production.

United States
1896-S Barber Quarter

1896-S Barber Quarter

One of the three classic key dates of the Barber quarter series, valued for its low original mintage and the difficulty of finding problem-free survivors.

United States
1921 Mercury Dime

1921 Mercury Dime

A key date of the Mercury dime series, struck in unusually low numbers amid a post-World War I economic slowdown that reduced coinage demand nationwide.

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
1913 Barber Quarter

1913 Barber Quarter

A lower-mintage date in the Barber Quarter series designed by Charles E. Barber, notable among collectors for the relatively small number struck at the Philadelphia Mint that year.

United States
1901-S Barber Quarter

1901-S Barber Quarter

The single rarest business-strike coin in the Barber quarter series, with an extremely small San Francisco mintage that makes even heavily worn examples valuable.

United States
1916-D Mercury Dime

1916-D Mercury Dime

The key date of the Mercury Dime series, the 1916-D was struck at Denver in a very low quantity, making genuine examples scarce and highly sought after by collectors.

United States
Lydian Croeseid (Croesus Stater)

Lydian Croeseid (Croesus Stater)

One of history's earliest bimetallic coinages, struck under the legendary King Croesus of Lydia, featuring the confronting foreparts of a lion and a bull.

Ancient
Kroisos (Croeseid) Gold Stater of Lydia

Kroisos (Croeseid) Gold Stater of Lydia

A pure gold stater struck under King Croesus of Lydia, part of history's first coinage issued in separate fixed-purity gold and silver denominations.

Ancient
1892 Barber Quarter

1892 Barber Quarter

The first-year issue of the Barber quarter series, introducing Charles Barber's new Liberty Head design after the retirement of the earlier Seated Liberty quarter.

United States
Valerian Antoninianus

Valerian Antoninianus

Radiate coin of Valerian, the only Roman emperor ever captured alive by a foreign enemy, taken prisoner by the Sassanid king Shapur I in 260 AD.

Ancient
1796 Half Cent

1796 Half Cent

One of the great rarities of American copper coinage, the 1796 half cent was struck in the Liberty Cap design in a very limited quantity, with 'With Pole' and rarer 'No Pole' varieties known.

United States