Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Spanish Gold Doubloon

Spanish Gold Doubloon

A popular name for large Spanish colonial gold coins, typically two, four, or eight escudos, forever associated with pirate treasure and sunken Spanish galleons.

World
Half Crown Gold

Half Crown Gold

A small gold coin worth half a gold crown, struck from the reign of Henry VIII through the English Civil War, distinct from the far more familiar silver half crown that circulated for centuries afterward.

British
Celtic Gold Stater

Celtic Gold Stater

Iron Age gold coins struck by Celtic tribes across Gaul and Britain, evolving from close imitations of Macedonian staters into strikingly abstract, stylized designs.

Ancient
1943 Washington Quarter Doubled Die Obverse

1943 Washington Quarter Doubled Die Obverse

A wartime-era doubled die variety of the Washington quarter showing clear doubling on obverse design elements, popular among collectors of Mint error and variety coins.

Errors & Varieties
Panama-Pacific $50 Gold (Round)

Panama-Pacific $50 Gold (Round)

A massive round commemorative gold piece struck for the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition, one of the rarest and most valuable U.S. commemorative coins ever issued.

Commemorative
Canadian Maple Leaf (Gold)

Canadian Maple Leaf (Gold)

Introduced in 1979, the Canadian Gold Maple Leaf was one of the first .9999 pure gold bullion coins in the world and remains a benchmark product of the Royal Canadian Mint.

Bullion
Saxony Thaler

Saxony Thaler

Saxony was one of the earliest and most prolific issuers of thalers, with the electorate and later kingdom producing large silver coins from the 16th century until German unification.

European
1889-CC Morgan Dollar

1889-CC Morgan Dollar

A major key date among Carson City Morgan dollars, with a low mintage of roughly 350,000 coins, making it one of the toughest CC-mint issues to find.

United States
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
Flowing Hair Half Dime

Flowing Hair Half Dime

One of the earliest United States silver coins, the Flowing Hair Half Dime was struck only in 1794 and 1795 and is a landmark rarity for early American coinage collectors.

United States
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
Spanish Colonial Cob (Macuquina)

Spanish Colonial Cob (Macuquina)

Crude, irregularly shaped hand-struck coins produced at Spanish colonial mints in the Americas for over two centuries, forming the basis of the famous 'pieces of eight' that circulated worldwide.

Latin American
Maundy Fourpence

Maundy Fourpence

The largest of the four Royal Maundy coins, a small silver fourpence descended in value from the medieval groat, struck annually for the monarch's ceremonial Maundy Thursday alms distribution.

British
1892 Barber Half Dollar

1892 Barber Half Dollar

First-year issue of Charles Barber's Liberty Head half dollar, with the 1892-O and 1892-S branch mint coins notably scarcer than the Philadelphia strike.

United States
New Zealand Waitangi Crown (1935)

New Zealand Waitangi Crown (1935)

Rare 1935 New Zealand silver crown depicting the meeting between Governor Hobson and Maori chiefs, one of the most valuable coins in British Commonwealth crown collecting.

Africa & Oceania
Netherlands East Indies Java Rupee

Netherlands East Indies Java Rupee

A Dutch colonial silver rupee struck specifically for the island of Java, issued to standardize local currency amid the many foreign trade coins circulating in the Dutch East Indies.

Asian
George V Five Cents (silver)

George V Five Cents (silver)

The last era of Canadian silver five-cent coins, struck under King George V until nickel replaced silver in 1922, including the legendary rarity of the 1921 date.

Canadian
1885 Trade Dollar

1885 Trade Dollar

One of the rarest official United States coins, a proof-only issue struck years after the Trade dollar series had officially ended, with only a handful of examples known.

United States
1999 Susan B. Anthony Dollar

1999 Susan B. Anthony Dollar

A one-year revival of the Susan B. Anthony dollar, struck in 1999 to meet demand for dollar coins in vending and transit use before the Sacagawea dollar's launch the following year.

United States
Matte Proof Lincoln Cent

Matte Proof Lincoln Cent

A special proof finish used on Lincoln cents from 1909 to 1916, featuring a fine, sandy, non-reflective surface instead of the mirror-like brilliance of earlier proof coins.

United States
1933 Double Eagle

1933 Double Eagle

One of the rarest and most legally contested U.S. coins, struck but never officially released for circulation after the nation left the gold standard; a single example sold for over $18 million.

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
1965-1970 Kennedy Half Dollar (40% Silver)

1965-1970 Kennedy Half Dollar (40% Silver)

Kennedy half dollars struck with a reduced 40% silver clad composition after the Coinage Act of 1965, bridging the gap between full silver coinage and today's copper-nickel clad coins.

United States
Spanish Peseta

Spanish Peseta

The peseta was Spain's national currency for over 130 years, evolving from silver coinage under a provisional 19th-century government to copper-nickel coins used until the euro replaced it in 2002.

European