Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Straits Settlements Dollar

Straits Settlements Dollar

The official silver dollar of Britain's Straits Settlements colony, bearing the reigning monarch's portrait and trilingual denomination on the reverse.

Asian
Classic Head Half Eagle ($5)

Classic Head Half Eagle ($5)

A short-lived early American gold five-dollar coin created after the Coinage Act of 1834 reduced gold coin weight to keep coins in circulation rather than being melted.

United States
Two Pound Coin

Two Pound Coin

The UK's bimetallic £2 coin, standardized for circulation in the late 1990s, widely used for a rotating series of commemorative reverse designs.

British
Liberty Head Eagle ($10)

Liberty Head Eagle ($10)

A long-running 19th-century gold coin featuring Christian Gobrecht's Coronet Head design, minted at numerous branch mints across the expanding United States.

United States
Indian Head Eagle ($10)

Indian Head Eagle ($10)

A striking early 20th-century gold eagle designed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens as part of President Theodore Roosevelt's push to beautify American coinage.

United States
Half Guinea

Half Guinea

Smaller companion gold coin to the guinea, worth half its value, struck across the same reigns from Charles II through George III for mid-value transactions.

British
Gold Half Sovereign

Gold Half Sovereign

Smaller companion to the gold sovereign, struck since 1817 at half the weight and value, sharing the same monarch portraits and often the same St George reverse design.

British
Hong Kong Dollar (1866–1868 Silver Dollar)

Hong Kong Dollar (1866–1868 Silver Dollar)

A short-lived silver dollar struck at Britain's ill-fated Hong Kong Mint, bearing Queen Victoria's portrait and intended to compete with Mexican and Chinese silver in Asian trade.

Asian
Spanish Colonial Cob 8 Reales (Macuquina)

Spanish Colonial Cob 8 Reales (Macuquina)

A crudely hand-struck Spanish colonial silver coin, cut from irregular silver bars and stamped with a cross and shield, famed worldwide as the original 'piece of eight'.

Latin American
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
Spanish 8 Reales Portrait Dollar

Spanish 8 Reales Portrait Dollar

The globally trusted "Spanish dollar" bearing a king's portrait, minted across Spain's vast colonial empire and so widely circulated it directly inspired the U.S. dollar sign and denomination.

European
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
Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle

Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle

Widely regarded as one of the most beautiful U.S. coins ever produced, designed by sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens at the urging of President Theodore Roosevelt.

United States
Liberty Head Half Eagle ($5)

Liberty Head Half Eagle ($5)

A widely produced 19th-century gold five-dollar coin bearing Christian Gobrecht's Coronet Head design, struck across nearly every major American branch mint of the era.

United States
Pound Coin

Pound Coin

The United Kingdom's £1 coin, introduced in 1983 to replace the paper pound note, redesigned as a 12-sided bimetallic coin in 2017.

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
Touchstone Sovereign (Fine Sovereign)

Touchstone Sovereign (Fine Sovereign)

A large, high-value English gold coin struck in especially pure 'fine gold,' valued at thirty shillings and distinguished from the more common crown-gold Sovereign of the same era.

British
Unite

Unite

A gold twenty-shilling coin introduced by James I in 1604 to celebrate the union of the English and Scottish crowns, its name literally symbolizing the joining of the two kingdoms.

British
Double Florin

Double Florin

A large Victorian silver coin worth four shillings, struck for only four years; its close resemblance in size to the crown and half-crown caused everyday confusion and gave it a lasting nickname.

British
Brazil 960 Reis

Brazil 960 Reis

Brazilian silver coin created by overstriking Spanish colonial 8 reales with new Portuguese royal dies, issued after the Portuguese royal court relocated to Brazil.

Latin American
Fasces Three-Cent Nickel

Fasces Three-Cent Nickel

A nickname sometimes applied to the copper-nickel Three-Cent Piece of 1865-1889, whose reverse wreath-and-numeral design is occasionally likened to classical fasces imagery from early pattern experiments.

United States
Jefferson Nickel

Jefferson Nickel

Struck since 1938, the Jefferson Nickel pairs a portrait of Thomas Jefferson with his home, Monticello, and briefly switched to a silver alloy during World War II.

United States
Royal Mint £5 Crown Commemorative

Royal Mint £5 Crown Commemorative

The modern British £5 coin descends from the historic crown and is issued almost exclusively for commemorative purposes, marking royal events, anniversaries, and national milestones.

Commemorative
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