Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Mark Antony Legionary Denarius

Mark Antony Legionary Denarius

A widely produced denarius struck by Mark Antony to pay his legions before the Battle of Actium, each type naming a specific Roman legion on the reverse.

Ancient
1793 Wreath Cent

1793 Wreath Cent

The second cent design of 1793, replacing the controversial Chain cent with a wreath reverse, and one of three distinct cent types struck that founding year.

United States
Leontini Lion Tetradrachm

Leontini Lion Tetradrachm

Silver tetradrachm of the Sicilian city of Leontini, showing the laureate head of Apollo and a lion's head or lion with barley grains, alluding to the city's wheat production.

Ancient
1982 Copper/Zinc Transition Lincoln Cent

1982 Copper/Zinc Transition Lincoln Cent

The single year the Lincoln cent's composition changed mid-year from 95% copper bronze to copper-plated zinc, producing seven recognized date, mint, and metal varieties.

Errors & Varieties
Japanese 50 Sen Silver (Meiji Phoenix)

Japanese 50 Sen Silver (Meiji Phoenix)

An early Meiji-era Japanese silver coin featuring a coiled dragon on the obverse and a phoenix on the reverse, part of Japan's first modern decimal coinage system introduced after the Meiji Restoration.

Asian
Lydian Croeseid (Croesus Stater)

Lydian Croeseid (Croesus Stater)

One of history's earliest bimetallic coinages, struck under the legendary King Croesus of Lydia, featuring the confronting foreparts of a lion and a bull.

Ancient
St George Sovereign (Pistrucci)

St George Sovereign (Pistrucci)

The modern gold sovereign's iconic reverse showing St George slaying the dragon, engraved by Benedetto Pistrucci in 1817 and still used on British sovereigns to this day.

British
Augustus Denarius

Augustus Denarius

The main silver coin of Rome's first emperor, Augustus, whose long reign established the imperial monetary system that would last for centuries.

Ancient
Ottoman Silver Akce

Ottoman Silver Akce

A tiny silver coin that served as the basic everyday currency unit of the Ottoman Empire for centuries, gradually shrinking in size and silver content as inflation took hold.

World
Third Farthing

Third Farthing

An extremely small denomination worth one-twelfth of a penny, struck mainly to serve the currency needs of the British colony of Malta across the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

British
Constantine URBS ROMA Commemorative

Constantine URBS ROMA Commemorative

A small bronze commemorative honoring the city of Rome with a helmeted Roma obverse and the iconic she-wolf suckling Romulus and Remus on the reverse.

Ancient
Spanish Gold Escudo (Doubloon)

Spanish Gold Escudo (Doubloon)

The gold denomination of the Spanish Empire, whose larger multiples became famous as "doubloons," struck both in Spain and across its American colonial mints for centuries.

European
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
1987 Loon Dollar (Aureate)

1987 Loon Dollar (Aureate)

Canada's first modern circulating dollar coin, introduced in 1987 to replace the paper dollar bill and nicknamed "the Loonie" after the common loon depicted on its reverse.

Canadian
1804 Draped Bust Silver Dollar

1804 Draped Bust Silver Dollar

Extraordinarily rare U.S. dollar known as "The King of American Coins," actually struck decades after its 1804 date for diplomatic gift sets and later collectors, with only 15 known examples.

United States
British Crown

British Crown

Valued at five shillings, the British crown is a large silver (and later cupro-nickel) coin with a production history stretching from Tudor England to modern commemorative issues.

British
Spanish Colonial Gold Escudo (Doubloon)

Spanish Colonial Gold Escudo (Doubloon)

The gold coinage of the Spanish American colonies, popularly nicknamed the doubloon, struck in denominations up to 8 escudos and famous from pirate and shipwreck lore.

Latin American
Cook Islands Colored Silver Coins

Cook Islands Colored Silver Coins

A broad category of colorful commemorative silver coins issued under the sovereignty of the Cook Islands, covering religious, historical, and pop-culture themes aimed at collectors worldwide.

Africa & Oceania
Hamburg Thaler

Hamburg Thaler

A silver thaler struck by the free city-state of Hamburg, bearing the city's iconic castle-and-towers coat of arms, reflecting Hamburg's status as a leading Hanseatic trading center.

European
Chinese Ban Liang Cash

Chinese Ban Liang Cash

China's first standardized round coin with a square center hole, introduced under Qin Shi Huang to unify currency across the newly consolidated Chinese empire.

Ancient
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
Seljuk Copper Fals

Seljuk Copper Fals

Base-metal copper coin of everyday commerce in the Seljuk Turkish world, notable for unusually rich figural imagery such as lions, suns, and double-headed eagles.

Asian
German Hamburg Ducat

German Hamburg Ducat

A small, exceptionally high-purity gold trade coin struck for centuries by the free city of Hamburg, prized for its consistent fineness and long production history.

European
Twenty Pence

Twenty Pence

A seven-sided UK coin introduced in 1982 to fill a gap between the ten pence and fifty pence denominations.

British