Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Mexican Gold Centenario (50 Pesos)

Mexican Gold Centenario (50 Pesos)

Mexico's iconic gold coin, first struck in 1921 to mark a century of independence, depicting the Angel of Independence and still produced today as bullion.

Bullion
Brazilian 6400 Reis Gold (Peça)

Brazilian 6400 Reis Gold (Peça)

A substantial colonial Brazilian gold coin nicknamed the "peça" (piece), widely known abroad as the "Johannes" or "Joe," and once common in trade across the Atlantic world.

Latin American
Argentine Peso Moneda Nacional (Patacón)

Argentine Peso Moneda Nacional (Patacón)

Argentina's long-standing peso moneda nacional coinage, informally nicknamed the patacón, formed the backbone of the country's currency from the 1880s well into the twentieth century.

Latin American
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
Uruguay Peso Silver 'Artigas'

Uruguay Peso Silver 'Artigas'

A silver Uruguayan peso honoring national founding hero Jose Gervasio Artigas, struck in the early twentieth century as part of Uruguay's circulating coinage.

Latin American
Mexican Emperor Maximilian Peso

Mexican Emperor Maximilian Peso

A silver peso struck during the brief reign of Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico, whose short-lived Second Mexican Empire ended with his execution in 1867.

Latin American
Chilean 20 Pesos Gold

Chilean 20 Pesos Gold

The smallest of Chile's regular gold coin denominations, issued both in an earlier 19th-century gold peso series and later as part of the 1926 condor-themed gold reform.

Latin American
Chilean Peso Silver 'Condor'

Chilean Peso Silver 'Condor'

Chile's standard silver peso coin, nicknamed the "condor" for the great Andean bird featured as a supporter on the national coat of arms depicted on the coin.

Latin American
1976 Montreal Olympics Silver Coin Series

1976 Montreal Olympics Silver Coin Series

A landmark seven-series program of sterling silver $5 and $10 coins issued by Canada to help finance and celebrate the 1976 Montreal Summer Olympics.

Commemorative
Cuba 4 Pesos Gold Jose Marti

Cuba 4 Pesos Gold Jose Marti

A small gold denomination from Cuba's early republican-era gold coinage, part of a 1915–1916 series (1 through 20 pesos) struck to circulate on par with US gold currency.

Latin American
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
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
Argentine Argentino Gold (5 Pesos)

Argentine Argentino Gold (5 Pesos)

Argentina's principal 19th-century gold coin, worth 5 pesos oro and called an "Argentino," struck to Latin Monetary Union weight standards for use in international trade.

Latin American
Argentine 1 Peso 'Liberty Head'

Argentine 1 Peso 'Liberty Head'

A short-lived Argentine silver peso from the early 1880s featuring a Liberty head design, struck only briefly before Argentina's monetary standards shifted.

Latin American
Mexican Un Peso Silver (Cap and Rays)

Mexican Un Peso Silver (Cap and Rays)

A late-nineteenth-century Mexican silver peso showing a radiant Liberty cap, struck at Mexico City and several regional mints during the Porfirio Díaz era.

Latin American
Half Guinea

Half Guinea

Smaller companion gold coin to the guinea, worth half its value, struck across the same reigns from Charles II through George III for mid-value transactions.

British
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
Costa Rica 2 Colones Gold

Costa Rica 2 Colones Gold

A small gold denomination from Costa Rica's early colon-era coinage, part of a family of gold coins (2, 5, 10, and 20 colones) struck around the turn of the twentieth century.

Latin American
Byzantine Gold Histamenon Nomisma

Byzantine Gold Histamenon Nomisma

A distinctive concave (cup-shaped) Byzantine gold coin introduced in the 10th century as the full-weight companion to the flat tetarteron nomisma.

Ancient
Guatemala Quetzal Silver

Guatemala Quetzal Silver

Guatemala's modern national currency unit, named after the resplendent quetzal bird, introduced in the 1920s with a substantial silver coin marking the country's monetary modernization.

Latin American
Egyptian Pound (gold)

Egyptian Pound (gold)

Egypt's principal gold coin, struck from the Khedivate through the Sultanate and early Kingdom era, carrying the ruler's portrait or tughra and Arabic legends.

Africa & Oceania
Spanish 8 Reales (Piece of Eight)

Spanish 8 Reales (Piece of Eight)

The legendary 'piece of eight,' Spain's silver dollar-sized coin that became the world's first truly global currency and the direct ancestor of the U.S. dollar.

World
Spanish-Philippine 8 Reales Counterstamped Dollar

Spanish-Philippine 8 Reales Counterstamped Dollar

Spanish colonial 8 reales silver dollar officially countermarked for circulation in the Philippines, a hybrid of Spanish American and Philippine monetary history.

Asian
United Arab Emirates Dirham

United Arab Emirates Dirham

Federal currency introduced in 1973 after the formation of the UAE, unifying the emirates' varied prior currencies into a single dirham divided into 100 fils.

Asian