Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

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
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
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
Thailand (Siam) Silver Baht 'Bullet Money' (Pod Duang)

Thailand (Siam) Silver Baht 'Bullet Money' (Pod Duang)

Distinctive bent-bar silver currency used in Siam for centuries, hand-formed into a bullet-like shape and stamped with royal marks in place of a flat coin design.

Asian
English Crown

English Crown

A large English silver coin worth five shillings, first struck under Henry VIII, that became one of Britain's most artistically celebrated denominations before decimalization.

British
Chinese Silver Panda

Chinese Silver Panda

China's annual silver bullion coin, issued since 1983 with a new panda design nearly every year, popular with both silver stackers and dedicated Panda date-set collectors.

Bullion
New Zealand Mint Silver Kiwi

New Zealand Mint Silver Kiwi

A popular silver bullion coin from the New Zealand Mint depicting the flightless kiwi bird, with a design refreshed most years since its debut.

Bullion
American Gold Buffalo

American Gold Buffalo

The first 24-karat gold coin struck by the U.S. Mint, adapting James Earle Fraser's classic Buffalo Nickel design for a modern bullion product.

Bullion
Indian Punch-Marked Karshapana

Indian Punch-Marked Karshapana

Among the earliest coins of South Asia, irregular silver bars struck repeatedly with multiple unrelated symbol punches rather than a single unified design.

Ancient
Postumus Antoninianus

Postumus Antoninianus

Radiate coin of Postumus, the general who broke away from Rome to found the separatist Gallic Empire covering Gaul, Britain, Germania, and Hispania during the Crisis of the Third Century.

Ancient
Korean 5 Yang Silver Dollar (1892)

Korean 5 Yang Silver Dollar (1892)

Korea's first Western-style, dollar-sized silver coin, struck in 1892 with a coiled dragon design as part of King Gojong's currency modernization.

Asian
Perth Mint Silver Swan

Perth Mint Silver Swan

A silver bullion coin from the Perth Mint featuring the black swan, an emblem of Western Australia, with a fresh design issued in most years.

Bullion
Indian Gold Mohur

Indian Gold Mohur

The traditional high-value gold coin of the Indian subcontinent, struck for centuries by Mughal emperors, later by the British East India Company, British India, and various princely states.

Asian
Australian Gold Sovereign (Sydney Mint)

Australian Gold Sovereign (Sydney Mint)

Gold sovereign struck at the Sydney Mint, Australia's first branch mint, opened to coin gold from the New South Wales gold rushes into imperial currency.

Africa & Oceania
Aegina Land Tortoise Stater

Aegina Land Tortoise Stater

A silver stater from the island of Aegina bearing a land tortoise, successor to the earlier sea-turtle design and among the earliest widely circulated coinages in the Greek world.

Ancient
Sixpence

Sixpence

A small British silver coin worth half a shilling, affectionately nicknamed the 'tanner,' beloved for its traditional role tucked into Christmas puddings.

British
Royal Canadian Mint Colored Poppy Quarter (2004)

Royal Canadian Mint Colored Poppy Quarter (2004)

Canada's 2004 poppy quarter is widely credited as the world's first coin with a colored design produced for general circulation, honoring Canadian war remembrance with a red poppy at its center.

Commemorative
India Gold Pagoda (Madras Presidency)

India Gold Pagoda (Madras Presidency)

Small gold coin traditionally used across South India, later adopted and standardized by the East India Company's Madras Presidency before being phased out for rupee-based currency.

Asian
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
Threepence

Threepence

A small British coin worth three pence, issued first as a tiny silver piece and later as the distinctive 12-sided brass 'threepenny bit' beloved for its unusual shape.

British
Florin (Two Shillings)

Florin (Two Shillings)

A British silver coin worth two shillings, notable for the controversial 1849 'Godless Florin' that omitted the customary religious motto, and for foreshadowing decimal coinage.

British
Chinese Empire Silver Dollar (Hsuan Tung Dragon)

Chinese Empire Silver Dollar (Hsuan Tung Dragon)

A late Qing dynasty silver dollar issued during the brief Hsuan Tung (Xuantong) reign of the last emperor, featuring an imperial dragon design.

Asian
Chinese Szechuan Rupee (Tibet-related)

Chinese Szechuan Rupee (Tibet-related)

Silver rupee struck by China's Szechuan provincial mint to compete with British Indian rupees circulating in Tibet, blending a Chinese ruler's portrait with an Indian-style coin format.

Asian
2 Euro Coin

2 Euro Coin

The highest-denomination circulating euro coin, with a silver-colored center inside a gold-colored ring, widely used by member states to issue popular commemorative designs collected across Europe.

European