Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Persian Gold Toman (Qajar)

Persian Gold Toman (Qajar)

The principal gold coin of Qajar Persia, valued at ten silver kran, struck under a succession of shahs from the late 18th century until the dynasty's end in 1925.

Asian
Bavaria Thaler

Bavaria Thaler

The historic large silver coin of Bavaria, struck across centuries by its electors and kings, capturing the state's political and artistic history until Germany's currency unification in the 1870s.

European
Visigothic Gold Tremissis

Visigothic Gold Tremissis

Small gold coin of the Visigothic kings of Spain, evolving from crude imitations of Roman/Byzantine coinage into the first distinctly national royal coinage of post-Roman Western Europe.

European
Italian 5 Lire Silver

Italian 5 Lire Silver

The silver 5 Lire was the largest circulating silver coin of the newly unified Kingdom of Italy, featuring the portraits of its early kings and the national eagle, and remains a favorite of Italian collectors.

European
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
English Sovereign of Henry VII

English Sovereign of Henry VII

The first English sovereign, introduced by Henry VII in 1489 as a large, prestigious gold coin showing the king enthroned in majesty, meant to project royal power after the Wars of the Roses.

British
1975 No S Proof Roosevelt Dime

1975 No S Proof Roosevelt Dime

One of the rarest and most valuable modern US coin errors: a 1975 proof dime struck without its San Francisco 'S' mintmark, with only a handful of examples known.

Errors & Varieties
American Gold Eagle

American Gold Eagle

The official U.S. gold bullion coin series since 1986, pairing Augustus Saint-Gaudens' famous Liberty design with a family-of-eagles reverse, issued in four sizes.

Bullion
Byzantine Solidus

Byzantine Solidus

The gold standard coin of the Byzantine Empire for over 700 years, the solidus funded an empire, financed trade across three continents, and remained one of history's most stable currencies.

Ancient
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
Two Pound Gold (Double Sovereign)

Two Pound Gold (Double Sovereign)

A gold coin worth two pounds sterling and roughly twice the weight of a sovereign, struck mainly for jubilees, coronations, and modern proof or bullion sets rather than daily circulation.

British
Syracuse Decadrachm

Syracuse Decadrachm

A large, exquisitely engraved silver coin from the Greek city of Syracuse, celebrated as one of the finest achievements of ancient Greek numismatic art, featuring the nymph Arethusa and a victorious chariot.

Ancient
New Zealand Penny (KGVI)

New Zealand Penny (KGVI)

New Zealand bronze penny struck under King George VI, notable for its reverse featuring the native tuatara reptile, part of the country's distinctive 1933-launched coin series.

Africa & Oceania
Australian Threepence (pre-decimal)

Australian Threepence (pre-decimal)

Small pre-decimal Australian silver coin worth three pence, popularly recognized for its bundled wheat-ear reverse design used across most of the 20th century.

Africa & Oceania
French 100 Francs Silver

French 100 Francs Silver

France's pre-euro 100 Franc denomination included both a long-running silver Panthéon coin for collectors and numerous limited commemorative silver issues honoring people, events, and anniversaries.

European
Canadian Colored Maple Leaf

Canadian Colored Maple Leaf

A colorized variant of Canada's iconic Maple Leaf bullion coin, applying vivid printed designs over the standard maple leaf or themed reverse to create eye-catching collector editions.

Canadian
French 5 Francs "Napoleon"

French 5 Francs "Napoleon"

A large silver crown-sized coin bearing the portrait of Napoleon Bonaparte, first as First Consul and later as Emperor, marking France's decimal franc system's early flagship silver denomination.

European
Ecuador Sucre Silver

Ecuador Sucre Silver

Ecuador's historic silver one-sucre coin, named after independence hero Antonio Jose de Sucre, circulated for decades before Ecuador's currency was eventually replaced by the US dollar.

Latin American
Rama IV Siamese Baht (first machine-struck)

Rama IV Siamese Baht (first machine-struck)

Landmark Siamese silver coin introduced under King Mongkut (Rama IV), marking the country's shift from traditional bullet-shaped money to modern, flat, machine-struck coinage.

Asian
Reichsthaler

Reichsthaler

The standard large silver coin of the Holy Roman Empire and its constituent German states from the 16th century onward, whose name is the direct linguistic ancestor of the word 'dollar.'

European
Julius Caesar Elephant Denarius

Julius Caesar Elephant Denarius

One of the most widely recognized ancient Roman coins, struck under Julius Caesar's authority and depicting an elephant trampling a serpent, likely a symbolic image tied to Caesar's political struggles.

Ancient
Dutch Silver Ducat

Dutch Silver Ducat

A historic Dutch trade silver coin first struck in 1659, depicting a standing knight, that has been minted continuously for centuries and remains a popular silver bullion and collector piece today.

European
Alexander the Great Tetradrachm

Alexander the Great Tetradrachm

The widely circulated silver coin of Alexander the Great, showing Herakles wearing a lion skin on the obverse and an enthroned Zeus on the reverse, struck across his empire and for generations after his death.

Ancient
Aegina Sea Turtle Stater

Aegina Sea Turtle Stater

One of the earliest widely circulated Greek silver coins, struck by the island city-state of Aegina, featuring a sea turtle and later a land tortoise, and nicknamed simply 'turtles' by ancient traders.

Ancient