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
1 Euro Coin

1 Euro Coin

The standard circulating one-euro coin used across the Eurozone since 2002, bimetallic with a gold-colored center and silver-colored ring, and a national obverse that varies by issuing country.

European
1967 Centennial Silver Dollar (Goose)

1967 Centennial Silver Dollar (Goose)

A one-year commemorative Canadian silver dollar struck for the 1967 Centennial of Confederation, its reverse depicting a Canada goose in flight, designed by Alex Colville.

Canadian
Victoria Ten Cents (dime)

Victoria Ten Cents (dime)

Canada's early silver ten-cent coin issued under Queen Victoria, struck intermittently from the introduction of decimal currency in 1858 through the end of her reign in 1901.

Canadian
Roman Republic Denarius

Roman Republic Denarius

The workhorse silver coin of the Roman Republic, introduced during the Second Punic War and struck by a long line of moneyers with ever-changing, often political, designs.

Ancient
Gallienus Antoninianus

Gallienus Antoninianus

Radiate coin of Gallienus, who ruled through the depths of the Crisis of the Third Century and is especially known for a colorful late-reign series of animal and mythological reverse types.

Ancient
Severus Alexander Denarius

Severus Alexander Denarius

Silver denarius of the teenage emperor Severus Alexander, last ruler of the Severan dynasty, whose reign closed with growing military unrest before his murder in 235 AD.

Ancient
Lampsakos Electrum Stater

Lampsakos Electrum Stater

An electrum stater from Lampsakos on the Hellespont, another important early precious-metal trade coinage of Asia Minor, often featuring a winged horse or janiform head.

Ancient
Presidential Dollar - Thomas Jefferson

Presidential Dollar - Thomas Jefferson

The third coin in the Presidential Dollar series, honoring Thomas Jefferson, sharing the same edge-lettering format and Statue of Liberty reverse as the earliest issues in the program.

United States
GSA Morgan Dollar

GSA Morgan Dollar

Morgan silver dollars, mostly from Carson City, sold by the U.S. General Services Administration in the 1970s in distinctive hard plastic holders with a black or brown outer box.

United States
1913 Barber Quarter

1913 Barber Quarter

A lower-mintage date in the Barber Quarter series designed by Charles E. Barber, notable among collectors for the relatively small number struck at the Philadelphia Mint that year.

United States
1965 Silver Washington Quarter (Transitional Error)

1965 Silver Washington Quarter (Transitional Error)

An extremely rare transitional error in which a 1965-dated quarter, meant to be struck in new copper-nickel clad metal, was accidentally struck on a leftover 90% silver planchet.

Errors & Varieties
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
Vienna Philharmonic

Vienna Philharmonic

Austria's celebrated bullion coin family built around a shared musical design honoring the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, issued in gold, silver, and platinum.

Bullion
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
Mexican 8 Reales Pillar Dollar

Mexican 8 Reales Pillar Dollar

Minted in colonial Mexico City from 1732 to the early 1770s, the pillar dollar's crowned globes and Pillars of Hercules design made it one of the most widely trusted silver trade coins in the world.

Latin American
Kai Yuan Tong Bao Cash

Kai Yuan Tong Bao Cash

A landmark Tang dynasty cash coin whose four-character reign-title inscription became the standard template for Chinese, and much of East Asian, coinage for the next 1,300 years.

Ancient
Five Pound Gold (Quintuple Sovereign)

Five Pound Gold (Quintuple Sovereign)

The largest standard gold coin in the British sovereign family, worth five pounds and equal to five sovereigns, struck intermittently since 1820 for commemorative and collector purposes.

British
Double Sovereign

Double Sovereign

A British gold coin worth two pounds, twice the value of the standard sovereign, struck intermittently since the nineteenth century for commemorative and bullion purposes.

British
Angel

Angel

An English gold coin depicting the Archangel Michael slaying a dragon, introduced in 1465 and famously used as a ceremonial 'touch piece' in royal healing rituals.

British
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
Ayyubid Dinar of Saladin

Ayyubid Dinar of Saladin

A gold dinar struck under Salah al-Din (Saladin), founder of the Ayyubid dynasty famed for recapturing Jerusalem, continuing the Islamic tradition of purely inscriptional coinage.

World
Abbasid Gold Dinar

Abbasid Gold Dinar

The standard gold coin of the Abbasid Caliphate centered on Baghdad, inscribed entirely in Arabic script and struck for roughly five centuries across a vast Islamic empire.

World
Byzantine Gold Semissis

Byzantine Gold Semissis

A scarce half-value gold fraction of the Byzantine solidus, struck in smaller numbers than the tremissis and often associated with ceremonial or donative purposes.

Ancient