Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

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
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
Higley Copper

Higley Copper

A privately minted colonial Connecticut copper token, famous for its blunt 'VALUE ME AS YOU PLEASE' inscription after colonists balked at its initial overvalued threepence rating.

United States
Spanish 2 Reales Pillar

Spanish 2 Reales Pillar

The Pillar 2 Reales was a fractional Spanish colonial silver coin featuring the famous Pillars of Hercules design, struck at mints across Spanish America and widely used in international trade.

Latin American
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
Pound Coin

Pound Coin

The United Kingdom's £1 coin, introduced in 1983 to replace the paper pound note, redesigned as a 12-sided bimetallic coin in 2017.

British
British Silver Britannia

British Silver Britannia

The Royal Mint's one-ounce silver bullion coin, launched in 1997 as a silver companion to the Gold Britannia, featuring the same classical Britannia design.

Bullion
Gold Half Sovereign

Gold Half Sovereign

Smaller companion to the gold sovereign, struck since 1817 at half the weight and value, sharing the same monarch portraits and often the same St George reverse design.

British
Gothic Crown

Gothic Crown

An ornate Victorian silver crown featuring a young Queen Victoria in Gothic-script lettering, widely admired as one of the most artistically accomplished coins in British history.

British
Five Pound Gold (Quintuple Sovereign)

Five Pound Gold (Quintuple Sovereign)

The largest standard gold coin in the British sovereign family, worth five pounds and equal to five sovereigns, struck intermittently since 1820 for commemorative and collector purposes.

British
St George Sovereign (Pistrucci)

St George Sovereign (Pistrucci)

The modern gold sovereign's iconic reverse showing St George slaying the dragon, engraved by Benedetto Pistrucci in 1817 and still used on British sovereigns to this day.

British
Double Sovereign

Double Sovereign

A British gold coin worth two pounds, twice the value of the standard sovereign, struck intermittently since the nineteenth century for commemorative and bullion purposes.

British
Britannia (Silver Bullion)

Britannia (Silver Bullion)

The Royal Mint's modern one-ounce silver bullion coin, featuring the classical figure of Britannia, popular with investors and design collectors worldwide.

Bullion
Shilling

Shilling

One of Britain's oldest circulating silver denominations, nicknamed the 'bob,' equal to twelve pence and struck for over four centuries before decimalisation.

British
Half Crown

Half Crown

A long-lived British coin worth one-eighth of a pound, struck from the Tudor era until decimalisation in 1970, valued today mainly for its portraits and design variety.

British
Florin (Two Shillings)

Florin (Two Shillings)

A British silver coin worth two shillings, notable for the controversial 1849 'Godless Florin' that omitted the customary religious motto, and for foreshadowing decimal coinage.

British
Decimal New Penny

Decimal New Penny

The UK's smallest decimal coin, introduced on Decimal Day, 15 February 1971, inscribed "NEW PENNY" until 1982.

British
Fifty Pence

Fifty Pence

The UK's distinctive seven-sided 50p coin, introduced in 1969 to replace the ten shilling note ahead of decimalisation.

British
Two Pound Coin

Two Pound Coin

The UK's bimetallic £2 coin, standardized for circulation in the late 1990s, widely used for a rotating series of commemorative reverse designs.

British
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