Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

1942/1 Mercury Dime Overdate

1942/1 Mercury Dime Overdate

A famous overdate error, this Philadelphia Mercury Dime shows remnants of a 1941 digit beneath the 1942 date, created when an old die hub was reused by mistake.

Errors & Varieties
French 100 Francs Gold (Angel/Genius)

French 100 Francs Gold (Angel/Genius)

A large French gold coin of the Third Republic featuring an allegorical winged genius writing the constitution, often called the 'Angel' by collectors.

European
Type 2 Indian Princess Gold Dollar

Type 2 Indian Princess Gold Dollar

A short-lived, notoriously weakly struck redesign of the U.S. gold dollar, prized today for its brief production window and the striking difficulties that led to its quick replacement.

United States
1917 Type 2 Standing Liberty Quarter

1917 Type 2 Standing Liberty Quarter

The revised Standing Liberty quarter design introduced later in 1917, adding chain mail over Liberty's chest and extra stars on the reverse, used through the end of the series in 1930.

United States
Type II Silver Three-Cent Piece

Type II Silver Three-Cent Piece

A short-lived redesign of the silver three-cent piece with heavier silver content and an outlined star, known for weak strikes and generally low mintages.

United States
Tibetan Silver Srang (Ganden Tangka type)

Tibetan Silver Srang (Ganden Tangka type)

A native Tibetan silver coin issued by the Ganden Phodrang government in Lhasa, featuring the Tibetan snow lion and traditional Tibetan script rather than Chinese imperial designs.

Asian
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
Japanese 1 Yen Silver Coin

Japanese 1 Yen Silver Coin

Japan's principal large silver coin of the Meiji era, featuring a coiled dragon, that became a major East Asian trade coin and a symbol of Japan's rapid currency modernization.

Asian
Peru 1 Sol Silver 'Seated Liberty'

Peru 1 Sol Silver 'Seated Liberty'

A classic Peruvian silver coin showing a seated female Liberty figure holding a shield and staff, struck intermittently over several decades at the Lima mint.

Latin American
1942/1-D Mercury Dime Overdate

1942/1-D Mercury Dime Overdate

The Denver counterpart to the famous 1942/1 overdate, this Mercury Dime shows a doubled date from reused 1941 die-making equipment and is scarcer than the Philadelphia version.

Errors & Varieties
Canadian Gold Maple Leaf (1 oz)

Canadian Gold Maple Leaf (1 oz)

Canada's flagship gold bullion coin, struck in .9999 fine gold by the Royal Canadian Mint since 1979, among the purest gold coins ever issued.

Bullion
Mexican Estados Unidos 1 Peso 'Morelos'

Mexican Estados Unidos 1 Peso 'Morelos'

A mid-twentieth-century Mexican silver peso portraying independence hero José María Morelos, struck in fifty-percent silver for just a few years after World War II.

Latin American
Japanese 1 Yen Silver 'Dragon' Trade Dollar

Japanese 1 Yen Silver 'Dragon' Trade Dollar

A Meiji-era Japanese silver yen featuring a coiled dragon, struck to standardize Japan's currency and, in a special trade dollar variant, to compete with Mexican and other silver dollars across East Asia.

Asian
Sun Yat-sen 'Memento' 1 Dollar (1927)

Sun Yat-sen 'Memento' 1 Dollar (1927)

Silver dollar bearing the portrait of Sun Yat-sen, struck to commemorate the founding of the Republic of China and widely circulated under the Nationalist government.

Asian
Korean 1 Yang Silver (Joseon/Great Han Empire)

Korean 1 Yang Silver (Joseon/Great Han Empire)

Silver 1 Yang coin from Korea's late Joseon currency reform of the 1890s, part of the kingdom's first modern, machine-struck decimal coinage.

Asian
1916 Standing Liberty Quarter

1916 Standing Liberty Quarter

The extremely low-mintage first-year issue of the Standing Liberty quarter, one of the most famous key dates in all of United States coinage.

United States
1885 Trade Dollar

1885 Trade Dollar

One of the rarest official United States coins, a proof-only issue struck years after the Trade dollar series had officially ended, with only a handful of examples known.

United States
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
Spanish Peseta

Spanish Peseta

The peseta was Spain's national currency for over 130 years, evolving from silver coinage under a provisional 19th-century government to copper-nickel coins used until the euro replaced it in 2002.

European
French Ecu (Louis d'Argent)

French Ecu (Louis d'Argent)

France's principal large silver coin of the pre-revolutionary era, bearing the reigning king's portrait, used as the standard silver crown-sized coin for over a century before decimalization.

European
Norwegian Krone

Norwegian Krone

The krone became Norway's national currency in 1875 upon joining the Scandinavian Monetary Union, and it has remained Norway's currency ever since, featuring the reigning monarch's portrait through the decades.

European
Swedish Krona

Swedish Krona

The krona has been Sweden's national currency since 1873, originally struck in silver as part of the Scandinavian Monetary Union and today issued in base metals bearing the reigning monarch's portrait.

European
French Louis d'Or

French Louis d'Or

The Louis d'Or was the principal gold coin of the French monarchy for over 150 years, named after the kings Louis who issued it, and struck until the eve of the Revolution.

European
Panama Balboa Silver

Panama Balboa Silver

Panama's dollar-sized silver crown, named for explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa and pegged 1:1 to the US dollar throughout its history.

Latin American