Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Japanese Meiji Gold 20 Yen

Japanese Meiji Gold 20 Yen

The largest and highest-denomination gold coin of Meiji-era Japan, featuring an imperial dragon design, struck to underpin Japan's modern gold-backed currency system.

Asian
Finnish Markka

Finnish Markka

Finland's national currency from the era of Russian imperial rule until the adoption of the euro, issued in a range of coin denominations reflecting the country's changing political history.

European
Diocletian Follis

Diocletian Follis

Large bronze follis of Diocletian, whose sweeping reforms ended the Crisis of the Third Century, established the Tetrarchy, and introduced this new standardized coin denomination in 294 AD.

Ancient
Gordian III Antoninianus

Gordian III Antoninianus

Radiate silver coin of Gordian III, who became sole emperor at about thirteen years old and reigned through Rome's costly war with Sassanid Persia.

Ancient
Athenian Owl Dekadrachm

Athenian Owl Dekadrachm

An extremely rare large-format silver coin of classical Athens, struck in only a handful of surviving examples and prized as one of the great rarities of ancient Greek numismatics.

Ancient
1999 Delaware State Quarter

1999 Delaware State Quarter

The debut coin of the U.S. Mint's 50 State Quarters Program, honoring Delaware as the first state to ratify the Constitution, featuring Caesar Rodney's historic ride.

Commemorative
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
Gold Noble

Gold Noble

England's first successful gold coin for general circulation, introduced in 1344 under Edward III, famous for its ship reverse commemorating English naval power.

British
Merovingian Gold Tremissis

Merovingian Gold Tremissis

A small gold coin of the Merovingian Frankish kingdom, worth one-third of a solidus, often naming the local moneyer who struck it rather than the reigning king.

European
Ryal

Ryal

A large Scottish silver coin issued under Mary, Queen of Scots and Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, nicknamed the 'sword dollar' for the crowned sword on its reverse.

British
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
1880 Shield Nickel

1880 Shield Nickel

A major key date of the Shield Nickel series with an extremely low business-strike mintage, making genuine circulated examples much scarcer than the coin's proofs.

United States
Australian Gold Nugget (Kangaroo)

Australian Gold Nugget (Kangaroo)

Australia's premier gold bullion coin, originally depicting real gold nuggets before switching to an annually changing kangaroo design, struck in .9999 fine gold.

Bullion
Swiss 20 Franc Vreneli

Swiss 20 Franc Vreneli

Switzerland's classic gold franc coin, depicting a young Swiss woman nicknamed Vreneli on the obverse and the Swiss shield on the reverse, a favorite of gold savers for over a century.

European
Colombian 8 Escudos Gold (Popayán)

Colombian 8 Escudos Gold (Popayán)

A large colonial gold doubloon struck at the historic Popayán mint in present-day Colombia, prized by collectors as one of the classic Spanish colonial gold coins of South America.

Latin American
Peru 8 Reales (Lima Mint)

Peru 8 Reales (Lima Mint)

The flagship silver dollar-size coin of colonial and early republican Peru, struck at the historic Lima mint from cob and pillar types through crowned-shield busts.

Latin American
Straits Settlements Silver Dollar

Straits Settlements Silver Dollar

A large British colonial silver dollar struck for Singapore, Penang, and Malacca, created to give the Straits Settlements a standardized coin after decades of competing foreign trade dollars.

Asian
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
Trajan Sestertius

Trajan Sestertius

A large bronze coin of Trajan, whose reign brought the Roman Empire to its greatest territorial extent, with reverses celebrating Dacian conquest, public works, and Trajan's Column.

Ancient
Farthing

Farthing

The smallest-value British bronze coin, worth a quarter of a penny, fondly remembered for its charming wren reverse design used from 1937 until its withdrawal.

British
Halfpenny

Halfpenny

A small British bronze coin worth half a penny, best known in its twentieth-century form featuring Sir Francis Drake's ship the Golden Hind on the reverse.

British
Aurelian Antoninianus

Aurelian Antoninianus

Radiate coin of Aurelian, the soldier-emperor who reunited the fractured Roman Empire and enacted a major coinage reform introducing standardized silver content marked with XXI or KA.

Ancient
Byzantine Follis

Byzantine Follis

The large bronze workhorse coin of everyday Byzantine commerce, reformed by Emperor Anastasius I in 498 AD with a prominent Greek numeral denoting its value of 40 nummi.

Ancient
Islamic Gold Dinar (Umayyad)

Islamic Gold Dinar (Umayyad)

The first purely epigraphic Islamic gold coin, introduced by Caliph Abd al-Malik around 696 AD, replacing figural Byzantine-style imagery with Quranic inscriptions.

Ancient