Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Somalia Elephant Silver Coin

Somalia Elephant Silver Coin

A popular annually-redesigned bullion coin issued in the name of Somalia depicting an African elephant, part of a broader African Wildlife series struck by a German mint.

Africa & Oceania
Maximian Follis

Maximian Follis

Large bronze follis of Maximian, co-Augustus with Diocletian who ruled the western half of the empire as part of the Tetrarchy and shared the same reformed coinage design.

Ancient
Chilean 50 Pesos Gold

Chilean 50 Pesos Gold

A mid-sized Chilean gold coin issued as part of the 1926 gold standard reform, sharing the condor design theme with its larger and smaller companion denominations.

Latin American
German Prussia 20 Mark Gold

German Prussia 20 Mark Gold

The standard gold coin of Prussia within the newly unified German Empire, featuring successive Prussian kings and forming a key part of the empire's gold mark system.

European
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
Chinese Hupeh Province Dragon Dollar

Chinese Hupeh Province Dragon Dollar

Silver dragon dollar struck by the Hupeh (Hubei) provincial mint in late Qing China, part of the wave of regional dragon-dollar coinage issued across the empire's provinces.

Asian
Sovereign (Ottawa Mint, C Mintmark)

Sovereign (Ottawa Mint, C Mintmark)

British gold sovereigns struck at the Ottawa branch of the Royal Mint between 1908 and 1919, marked with a small "C," making Canada part of the empire's global sovereign network.

Canadian
Somalian Silver Elephant (African Wildlife)

Somalian Silver Elephant (African Wildlife)

An annually redesigned silver bullion coin featuring an African elephant, issued in the name of Somalia but struck at a German state mint since 2004.

Africa & Oceania
German Bavaria Thaler

German Bavaria Thaler

A large silver crown-sized coin issued by the Bavarian state, one of many German territorial thalers struck before German unification.

European
Japanese Nishu-kin (gold coin)

Japanese Nishu-kin (gold coin)

Small rectangular gold coin from Tokugawa Japan valued at two shu, or one-eighth of a ryo, part of a fractional gold denomination system unique to Edo-period currency.

Asian
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
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
Somali Elephant Gold

Somali Elephant Gold

The gold version of Somalia's popular African Wildlife elephant coin series, produced by the Bavarian State Mint with a design refreshed nearly every year.

Bullion
Vatican Euro Coins

Vatican Euro Coins

Official euro coinage of the world's smallest sovereign state, struck in very limited quantities and highly sought after by euro coin collectors worldwide.

European
Japanese 50 Sen Silver (Meiji Phoenix)

Japanese 50 Sen Silver (Meiji Phoenix)

An early Meiji-era Japanese silver coin featuring a coiled dragon on the obverse and a phoenix on the reverse, part of Japan's first modern decimal coinage system introduced after the Meiji Restoration.

Asian
Two Guinea (Double Guinea)

Two Guinea (Double Guinea)

A substantial gold coin worth two guineas, struck intermittently from the reign of Charles II through George II as part of England and Great Britain's early guinea coinage system.

British
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
South African Republic Burgers Pond

South African Republic Burgers Pond

The first coin struck for an independent South African state, issued in 1874 under President Thomas Burgers of the Transvaal, famous for its 'coarse beard' and 'fine beard' portrait varieties.

Africa & Oceania
Bolivian Boliviano Silver

Bolivian Boliviano Silver

Bolivia's national currency unit, the boliviano, was introduced in the 1860s as a substantial silver coin and remains the country's monetary unit in modern, non-silver form.

Latin American
German Empire 20 Mark Gold (Wilhelm II)

German Empire 20 Mark Gold (Wilhelm II)

The standard gold coin of the German Empire under Kaiser Wilhelm II, struck at multiple state mints and widely collected for its imperial portrait and eagle reverse.

European
Laurel

Laurel

A gold twenty-shilling coin issued from 1619, named for its laureate royal portrait styled after Roman emperors, replacing the earlier Unite as James I's principal gold denomination.

British
Nuremberg Thaler

Nuremberg Thaler

Silver taler struck by the free imperial city of Nuremberg, often showing a detailed cityscape view rather than a ruler's portrait, reflecting its status as a self-governing trading city.

European
Julius Caesar Portrait Denarius

Julius Caesar Portrait Denarius

A landmark Roman coin struck in 44 BC bearing the portrait of Julius Caesar during his lifetime, the first time a living Roman had appeared on state coinage.

Ancient
Portuguese Escudo

Portuguese Escudo

Portugal's national currency unit from the 1911 decimal reform, following the fall of the monarchy, until the Euro replaced it in the early 2000s.

European