Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Tibetan Silver Srang (Ganden Tangka type)

Tibetan Silver Srang (Ganden Tangka type)

A native Tibetan silver coin issued by the Ganden Phodrang government in Lhasa, featuring the Tibetan snow lion and traditional Tibetan script rather than Chinese imperial designs.

Asian
Vietnamese Silver Bar (Lang / Thoi Bac)

Vietnamese Silver Bar (Lang / Thoi Bac)

Traditional Vietnamese ingot currency from the Nguyen Dynasty, cast or hammered silver bars denominated in lang (tael) rather than struck as round coins.

Asian
British India Silver Rupee (Victoria Empress)

British India Silver Rupee (Victoria Empress)

Silver rupee of British India struck under Queen Victoria as Empress of India, the workhorse coin of the Raj's monetary system from 1877 to 1901.

Asian
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
1949 Newfoundland Silver Dollar (Matthew ship)

1949 Newfoundland Silver Dollar (Matthew ship)

A commemorative Canadian silver dollar marking Newfoundland's entry into Confederation in 1949, its reverse depicting John Cabot's ship the Matthew.

Canadian
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
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
Japanese Bu / Ichibu-gin (silver bar coin)

Japanese Bu / Ichibu-gin (silver bar coin)

Rectangular silver bar-shaped coin used as fixed-value currency in Tokugawa Japan, valued as a fraction of the gold ryo rather than by weight.

Asian
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
Japanese 1 Yen Silver 'Dragon' Trade Dollar

Japanese 1 Yen Silver 'Dragon' Trade Dollar

A Meiji-era Japanese silver yen featuring a coiled dragon, struck to standardize Japan's currency and, in a special trade dollar variant, to compete with Mexican and other silver dollars across East Asia.

Asian
South African Union Silver Crown (5 Shillings)

South African Union Silver Crown (5 Shillings)

Large silver crown of the Union of South Africa, struck periodically from the late 1940s, featuring a springbok reverse and occasional special commemorative designs.

Africa & Oceania
1799/8 Draped Bust Silver Dollar Overdate

1799/8 Draped Bust Silver Dollar Overdate

A prized die variety of the Draped Bust silver dollar where an 1799 obverse die was punched over a leftover 1798 date, leaving overlapping digits visible under magnification.

Errors & Varieties
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
Hong Kong Silver Dollar (1866–1868, Victoria)

Hong Kong Silver Dollar (1866–1868, Victoria)

A short-lived silver dollar struck at Britain's ill-fated Hong Kong Mint, bearing a young portrait of Queen Victoria; the mint closed within two years.

Asian
1971-S Eisenhower Silver Dollar (Blue Ike)

1971-S Eisenhower Silver Dollar (Blue Ike)

A 40% silver uncirculated Eisenhower dollar from San Francisco, nicknamed the Blue Ike for the blue-tinted envelope the U.S. Mint used to package it for collectors.

United States
War Nickel (Silver 1942-1945 Jefferson Nickel)

War Nickel (Silver 1942-1945 Jefferson Nickel)

A special wartime Jefferson Nickel alloy struck without nickel metal to conserve it for military use, identifiable by a large mintmark placed above Monticello's dome.

United States
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
Korean 1 Yang Silver (Joseon/Great Han Empire)

Korean 1 Yang Silver (Joseon/Great Han Empire)

Silver 1 Yang coin from Korea's late Joseon currency reform of the 1890s, part of the kingdom's first modern, machine-struck decimal coinage.

Asian
Quarter Guinea

Quarter Guinea

A rarely issued small gold coin worth one-quarter of a guinea, struck only in 1718 under George I and again briefly in 1762 under George III.

British
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
Higley Copper

Higley Copper

A privately minted colonial Connecticut copper token, famous for its blunt 'VALUE ME AS YOU PLEASE' inscription after colonists balked at its initial overvalued threepence rating.

United States
1883 With Cents Liberty Head Nickel

1883 With Cents Liberty Head Nickel

The corrected version of the 1883 Liberty Head Nickel with CENTS added below the wreath, issued later the same year to stop widespread gold-plating fraud tied to the earlier No Cents design.

United States
Spade Guinea

Spade Guinea

A George III gold guinea nicknamed for its spade-shaped shield reverse, one of the last widely circulated guinea types before the denomination was phased out in the early 1800s.

British
1912-S Liberty Head Nickel

1912-S Liberty Head Nickel

The only Liberty Head V Nickel struck at the San Francisco Mint and the lowest-mintage business strike of the entire series, making it a major key date.

United States