Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Mende Dionysos on Donkey Tetradrachm

Mende Dionysos on Donkey Tetradrachm

A striking Classical-era silver tetradrachm from the wine-city of Mende, showing the wine-god Dionysos reclining drunkenly on a donkey, one of ancient coinage's most whimsical designs.

Ancient
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
1873-CC Seated Liberty Quarter (No Arrows)

1873-CC Seated Liberty Quarter (No Arrows)

One of the great rarities of the Seated Liberty quarter series, this tiny Carson City issue predates the mid-1873 arrows-at-date modification and survives in only a handful of known examples.

United States
1827 Capped Bust Quarter

1827 Capped Bust Quarter

One of the most celebrated rarities in American numismatics, the 1827 quarter exists only as extremely rare proof-like Originals and later Restrikes rather than typical circulation coinage.

United States
1950-S/D Washington Quarter Overmintmark

1950-S/D Washington Quarter Overmintmark

A 1950 San Francisco Washington quarter struck from a die where an S mintmark was punched over a leftover D, creating one of the best-known overmintmark errors in the series.

Errors & Varieties
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
Brasher Doubloon

Brasher Doubloon

A famous privately struck gold coin made in 1787 by New York goldsmith Ephraim Brasher, a neighbor of George Washington, and one of the most valuable and celebrated coins in American numismatics.

United States
Chinese Silver Dragon Dollar (Kwangtung Province)

Chinese Silver Dragon Dollar (Kwangtung Province)

One of China's earliest machine-struck silver dollars, produced by Kwangtung province in the late Qing dynasty with an imperial dragon design, a pioneering issue other provinces soon imitated.

Asian
Syracuse Decadrachm

Syracuse Decadrachm

A large, exquisitely engraved silver coin from the Greek city of Syracuse, celebrated as one of the finest achievements of ancient Greek numismatic art, featuring the nymph Arethusa and a victorious chariot.

Ancient
George VI Small Cent (Maple Twig)

George VI Small Cent (Maple Twig)

Canada's bronze one-cent coin issued under King George VI, featuring two maple leaves on a twig, a design that helped modernize Canadian coinage in the late 1930s.

Canadian
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
1975 No S Proof Roosevelt Dime

1975 No S Proof Roosevelt Dime

One of the rarest and most valuable modern US coin errors: a 1975 proof dime struck without its San Francisco 'S' mintmark, with only a handful of examples known.

Errors & Varieties
1876-CC Twenty-Cent Piece

1876-CC Twenty-Cent Piece

One of the great rarities of United States coinage: a Carson City twenty-cent piece of which nearly the entire mintage was melted, leaving only a small number of survivors known.

United States
1970 No S Proof Roosevelt Dime

1970 No S Proof Roosevelt Dime

A proof Roosevelt dime struck without its 'S' mintmark, one of a series of similar San Francisco die errors found across several years in the late 1960s and 1970s.

Errors & Varieties
Byzantine Solidus

Byzantine Solidus

The gold standard coin of the Byzantine Empire for over 700 years, the solidus funded an empire, financed trade across three continents, and remained one of history's most stable currencies.

Ancient
1913 Liberty Head Nickel

1913 Liberty Head Nickel

One of the most famous rarities in American numismatics: only five examples exist of a Liberty Head nickel dated 1913, a year in which the design was officially replaced by the Buffalo nickel.

United States
Ecuador Sucre Silver

Ecuador Sucre Silver

Ecuador's historic silver one-sucre coin, named after independence hero Antonio Jose de Sucre, circulated for decades before Ecuador's currency was eventually replaced by the US dollar.

Latin American
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
Julius Caesar Elephant Denarius

Julius Caesar Elephant Denarius

One of the most widely recognized ancient Roman coins, struck under Julius Caesar's authority and depicting an elephant trampling a serpent, likely a symbolic image tied to Caesar's political struggles.

Ancient
1970-S Washington Quarter Proof on 1941 Canadian Quarter

1970-S Washington Quarter Proof on 1941 Canadian Quarter

One of the most famous US mint errors: a 1970-S proof Washington quarter accidentally struck over a leftover silver 1941 Canadian quarter planchet at the San Francisco Mint.

Errors & Varieties
1823/2 Capped Bust Quarter Overdate

1823/2 Capped Bust Quarter Overdate

One of the rarest die varieties in the entire United States quarter series, the 1823/2 overdate shows a 3 punched over a leftover 2, from an extremely limited production run.

Errors & Varieties
Aegina Sea Turtle Stater

Aegina Sea Turtle Stater

One of the earliest widely circulated Greek silver coins, struck by the island city-state of Aegina, featuring a sea turtle and later a land tortoise, and nicknamed simply 'turtles' by ancient traders.

Ancient
Persian Kran (Qajar silver)

Persian Kran (Qajar silver)

The standard silver coin of Qajar Persia, worth one-tenth of a gold toman, widely struck under Naser al-Din Shah and later rulers and commonly seen with the lion-and-sun emblem.

Asian
1937-D Three-Legged Buffalo Nickel

1937-D Three-Legged Buffalo Nickel

One of the most famous U.S. mint errors, this Denver-struck Buffalo Nickel variety shows the bison missing its front leg after a Mint worker over-polished a damaged die.

Errors & Varieties