Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Braided Hair Large Cent

Braided Hair Large Cent

The final large cent design, showing Liberty with braided hair, produced until the bulky copper cent was replaced by the small Flying Eagle cent in 1857.

United States
Nickel Three-Cent Piece

Nickel Three-Cent Piece

A post-Civil War small coin struck in copper-nickel to replace the fragile silver three-cent piece and small-denomination paper currency then in circulation.

United States
Two-Cent Piece

Two-Cent Piece

A short-lived Civil War-era coin notable as the first U.S. coin to bear the motto 'IN GOD WE TRUST,' issued to help ease a wartime coin shortage.

United States
Silver Three-Cent Piece (Trime)

Silver Three-Cent Piece (Trime)

A tiny silver coin created to match the new 3-cent postage rate, the trime is the smallest-diameter coin ever struck by the U.S. Mint.

United States
Lincoln Memorial Cent

Lincoln Memorial Cent

The long-running Lincoln cent reverse featuring the Lincoln Memorial, used for half a century and one of the most commonly encountered coins in American pockets and collections.

United States
Draped Bust Half Cent

Draped Bust Half Cent

An early U.S. copper coin depicting a draped bust of Liberty, struck for everyday small change in the first decade of the 19th century.

United States
1787 Brasher Doubloon

1787 Brasher Doubloon

An extraordinarily rare private gold coin struck by New York goldsmith Ephraim Brasher in 1787, now one of the most valuable and famous coins in American numismatics.

United States
1913 Liberty Head Nickel

1913 Liberty Head Nickel

One of the most famous rarities in American numismatics: only five examples exist of a Liberty Head nickel dated 1913, a year in which the design was officially replaced by the Buffalo nickel.

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
1955 Doubled Die Lincoln Cent

1955 Doubled Die Lincoln Cent

A famous doubled die error showing strong, plainly visible doubling on the date and lettering of the obverse, among the most recognizable die varieties in U.S. coinage.

Errors & Varieties
Indian Head Cent

Indian Head Cent

A long-running 19th-century one-cent coin depicting Liberty in a Native American-style feathered headdress, popular with collectors for its accessible half-century run.

United States
Buffalo Nickel

Buffalo Nickel

Beloved American five-cent coin featuring a Native American portrait and an American bison, designed by James Earle Fraser and celebrated for its distinctly American imagery.

United States
Peace Silver Dollar

Peace Silver Dollar

Silver dollar issued to commemorate peace after World War I, succeeding the Morgan dollar in 1921 with a striking Art Deco Liberty portrait and eagle-on-rock reverse.

United States
Grant Memorial Gold Dollar

Grant Memorial Gold Dollar

A commemorative gold dollar marking the centennial of Ulysses S. Grant's birth, famous for a rare small-star variety on the obverse.

Commemorative
McKinley Memorial Gold Dollar

McKinley Memorial Gold Dollar

A small commemorative gold dollar honoring assassinated President William McKinley, sold to raise funds for a memorial building in his Ohio birthplace.

Commemorative
Lewis and Clark Gold Dollar Commemorative

Lewis and Clark Gold Dollar Commemorative

A commemorative gold dollar honoring explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, struck in 1904 and 1905 for the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in Portland, Oregon.

Commemorative
1972 Eisenhower Dollar (Type 2)

1972 Eisenhower Dollar (Type 2)

A scarce reverse variety of the 1972 Eisenhower dollar, distinguished by a more detailed, higher-relief rendering of the Earth behind the moon-landing eagle, and prized by variety collectors.

Errors & Varieties
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
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
Turban Head Eagle

Turban Head Eagle

The first U.S. $10 gold coin, struck 1795-1804 and nicknamed 'Turban Head' for Liberty's cap-like headdress; the earliest examples pair her portrait with a small, spread-winged eagle.

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
Three-Dollar Gold Piece

Three-Dollar Gold Piece

An unusual and short-lived gold denomination created partly to simplify buying sheets of three-cent postage stamps, now a favorite oddity among gold coin collectors.

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
1934 Peace Dollar

1934 Peace Dollar

A Depression-era Peace Dollar issue struck at three mints, with the low-mintage 1934-S standing out as a semi-key date prized by collectors.

United States