Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Nova Constellatio Copper

Nova Constellatio Copper

Distinctive early American copper coin featuring a radiant eye within a circle of stars, associated with Gouverneur Morris's proposed decimal coinage plans of the early 1780s.

United States
Immune Columbia Copper

Immune Columbia Copper

An extremely rare Confederation-era copper carrying the Latin legend 'IMMUNIS COLUMBIA,' known for numerous unusual die combinations and mules with other early American and British designs.

United States
Philippine Peso (US Administration, 1903)

Philippine Peso (US Administration, 1903)

Silver one-peso coin struck for the Philippines under early American colonial administration, part of a new US-designed coinage system introduced in 1903.

Asian
Kellogg & Co. Gold Piece

Kellogg & Co. Gold Piece

Private gold coinage struck by the San Francisco firm Kellogg & Co. during the California Gold Rush, including the famous octagonal fifty-dollar 'slug' of 1855, filling a shortage of circulating coin.

United States
New Jersey Copper

New Jersey Copper

State-authorized copper coinage struck for New Jersey in the late 1780s, famous for its horse-head-and-plow obverse and shield reverse design.

United States
Vermont Copper

Vermont Copper

Copper coinage struck under authority of the independent Vermont Republic in the 1780s, featuring an early landscape design and later a Britannia-style type.

United States
Talbot, Allum & Lee Cent

Talbot, Allum & Lee Cent

A merchant token issued by the New York trading firm Talbot, Allum & Lee to help ease the shortage of small change in the 1790s, featuring a sailing ship on the obverse.

United States
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
Connecticut Copper

Connecticut Copper

State-authorized copper coinage struck for Connecticut in the mid-1780s, featuring a bust obverse and seated Liberty reverse across numerous die varieties.

United States
Philippine 20 Centavos (US-Philippines)

Philippine 20 Centavos (US-Philippines)

A small silver coin from the US administration of the Philippines, showing Liberty striking an anvil before Mount Mayon on the obverse and a heraldic eagle on the reverse.

Asian
Continental Dollar

Continental Dollar

A large 1776-dated piece bearing a sundial, 'MIND YOUR BUSINESS,' and a thirteen-link chain, long debated as either an intended Continental Congress dollar or a contemporary satirical piece.

United States
Celtic Gold Stater

Celtic Gold Stater

Iron Age gold coins struck by Celtic tribes across Gaul and Britain, evolving from close imitations of Macedonian staters into strikingly abstract, stylized designs.

Ancient
Kaulonia Apollo Stater

Kaulonia Apollo Stater

An archaic South Italian silver stater from Kaulonia depicting Apollo striding with a small running figure on his outstretched arm and a stag beside him.

Ancient
Massachusetts Cent (1787-1788)

Massachusetts Cent (1787-1788)

State-issued copper coinage struck by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1787 and 1788, notable as the first official U.S. coinage to use the denomination 'cent'.

United States
Nova Eborac Copper

Nova Eborac Copper

A 1787-dated copper bearing the Latin name for New York, struck privately after the state failed to authorize its own copper coinage contract during the chaotic Confederation-era coin shortage.

United States
Thebes Boeotian Shield Stater

Thebes Boeotian Shield Stater

A silver stater from Boeotia bearing the distinctive figure-eight-shaped Boeotian shield, the common civic emblem struck by Thebes and its allied cities for centuries.

Ancient
Metapontum Barley Ear Stater

Metapontum Barley Ear Stater

A silver stater from the Greek colony of Metapontum in southern Italy, celebrated for its elegant ear-of-barley design symbolizing the city's agricultural wealth.

Ancient
Boeotia Federal Coinage Stater

Boeotia Federal Coinage Stater

A silver stater struck under the Boeotian League's shared coinage system, instantly recognizable by the distinctive figure-eight Boeotian shield on the obverse.

Ancient
Aegina Sea Turtle Stater

Aegina Sea Turtle Stater

One of the earliest widely circulated Greek silver coins, struck by the island city-state of Aegina, featuring a sea turtle and later a land tortoise, and nicknamed simply 'turtles' by ancient traders.

Ancient
Sybaris Bull Stater

Sybaris Bull Stater

An archaic incuse-fabric silver stater from the legendarily wealthy city of Sybaris, showing a bull looking back over its shoulder, struck before the city's destruction in 510 BC.

Ancient
Lampsakos Electrum Stater

Lampsakos Electrum Stater

An electrum stater from Lampsakos on the Hellespont, another important early precious-metal trade coinage of Asia Minor, often featuring a winged horse or janiform head.

Ancient
Kroton Tripod Stater

Kroton Tripod Stater

A silver stater from the Greek colony of Kroton in southern Italy, depicting Apollo's sacred tripod, among the finest examples of the early incuse coinage style.

Ancient
Cyzicus Electrum Stater

Cyzicus Electrum Stater

An electrum stater from the trading city of Cyzicus on the Sea of Marmara, part of one of the most important and long-lived precious-metal trade currencies of the ancient world.

Ancient
Armorican Billon Stater

Armorican Billon Stater

A debased silver-alloy stater struck by Celtic tribes of Armorica (modern Brittany), showing wildly abstracted horse and head designs derived from Greek prototypes.

Ancient