Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Indian Punch-Marked Karshapana

Indian Punch-Marked Karshapana

Among the earliest coins of South Asia, irregular silver bars struck repeatedly with multiple unrelated symbol punches rather than a single unified design.

Ancient
Booker T. Washington Memorial Half Dollar

Booker T. Washington Memorial Half Dollar

A commemorative half dollar honoring educator Booker T. Washington, notable as the first U.S. coin designed by an African American sculptor and the first to depict a Black American.

Commemorative
Australian Gold Sovereign (Sydney Mint)

Australian Gold Sovereign (Sydney Mint)

Gold sovereign struck at the Sydney Mint, Australia's first branch mint, opened to coin gold from the New South Wales gold rushes into imperial currency.

Africa & Oceania
Septimius Severus Denarius

Septimius Severus Denarius

Silver denarius of Septimius Severus, African-born founder of the Severan dynasty, who rose to power through the civil wars following Commodus's death.

Ancient
2021 Tuskegee Airmen America the Beautiful Quarter

2021 Tuskegee Airmen America the Beautiful Quarter

A 2021 America the Beautiful Quarter honoring the Tuskegee Airmen, the pioneering African American military pilots of World War II, at their Alabama training site.

United States
Kyrene Silphium Tetradrachm

Kyrene Silphium Tetradrachm

A silver tetradrachm from the North African Greek city of Kyrene featuring the now-extinct silphium plant, the source of the city's legendary wealth as a prized ancient medicinal herb.

Ancient
British Guinea

British Guinea

England's premier gold coin for over 150 years, named for the West African region that supplied much of its gold and eventually valued at 21 shillings.

British
Zanzibar Riyal

Zanzibar Riyal

Silver riyal issued by the Sultanate of Zanzibar under Sultan Barghash bin Said, designed to circulate alongside the widely trusted Maria Theresa thaler in East African trade.

Africa & Oceania
Guinea

Guinea

Historic British gold coin named for the West African region that supplied much of its gold, valued at 21 shillings for most of its history and predecessor to the modern sovereign.

British
British Gold Guinea

British Gold Guinea

Struck from 1663 to 1814 and named for the West African gold used in its earliest issues, the guinea was Britain's leading gold coin and gave its name to a unit of value still referenced today.

British
Austrian Thaler (Joseph II)

Austrian Thaler (Joseph II)

A silver thaler bearing the portrait of Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, struck in the late 18th century and, like the more famous Maria Theresa thaler, later restruck for use in Levant and African trade.

European
Prussian Vereinsthaler

Prussian Vereinsthaler

A standardized silver thaler struck by the Kingdom of Prussia under the 1857 Vienna Monetary Treaty, unifying weight and fineness across many German and Austrian states before German unification.

European
French 5 Francs Hercules

French 5 Francs Hercules

A large silver crown depicting an allegorical Hercules flanked by Liberty and Equality, struck at pivotal republican moments in French history as a statement of civic ideals.

European
Unite

Unite

A gold twenty-shilling coin introduced by James I in 1604 to celebrate the union of the English and Scottish crowns, its name literally symbolizing the joining of the two kingdoms.

British
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
Thurium (Thurii) Athena and Bull Nomos

Thurium (Thurii) Athena and Bull Nomos

Silver nomos of the Greek colony of Thurii in southern Italy, showing a helmeted Athena obverse and a butting bull reverse, a classic Magna Graecia type.

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
British Trade Dollar

British Trade Dollar

A silver trade dollar struck by Britain to compete with the Mexican and Spanish dollars circulating across Hong Kong, China, and Southeast Asia.

Asian
Chinese Yunnan Province Dragon Dollar

Chinese Yunnan Province Dragon Dollar

A silver dragon dollar struck by China's remote southwestern Yunnan province, notable for its distinctive coiled dragon design and unusually long production continuing well into the Republic era.

Asian
French Indochina Piastre de Commerce

French Indochina Piastre de Commerce

A large silver trade dollar issued by colonial French Indochina, weighted to match the Mexican and Spanish trade dollars already circulating throughout Southeast Asian and Chinese commerce.

Asian
Italian 100 Lire Gold

Italian 100 Lire Gold

The largest gold denomination of the Kingdom of Italy's Latin Monetary Union coinage, struck under Vittorio Emanuele II and Umberto I in relatively limited numbers.

European
Italian 20 Lire Gold (Vittorio Emanuele)

Italian 20 Lire Gold (Vittorio Emanuele)

The Kingdom of Italy's standard 20 lire gold coin, issued under kings including Vittorio Emanuele II, sharing the Latin Monetary Union's gold specifications with coins like the French Napoleon.

European
Spanish 20 Pesetas Gold (Alfonso XII)

Spanish 20 Pesetas Gold (Alfonso XII)

Spain's standard gold coin of the Latin Monetary Union era, struck under King Alfonso XII following the restoration of the Spanish monarchy in the 1870s.

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