Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Buffalo Nickel

Buffalo Nickel

Beloved American five-cent coin featuring a Native American portrait and an American bison, designed by James Earle Fraser and celebrated for its distinctly American imagery.

United States
Copper-Nickel Indian Head Cent

Copper-Nickel Indian Head Cent

The earliest Indian Head cents, struck in copper-nickel from 1859 to 1864 before the Mint switched to a thinner bronze alloy, nicknamed 'white cents' for their pale color.

United States
1938-D Buffalo Nickel

1938-D Buffalo Nickel

The final year of the Buffalo Nickel series, the 1938-D was widely saved by the public at the time and remains a popular, affordable last-year issue for collectors.

United States
1918/7-D Buffalo Nickel

1918/7-D Buffalo Nickel

One of the most famous overdate errors in United States coinage, showing 1918 struck over an earlier 1917 date on a Buffalo nickel die reused at the Denver Mint.

Errors & Varieties
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
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
1937 Doubled Die Obverse Buffalo Nickel

1937 Doubled Die Obverse Buffalo Nickel

A doubled die variety of the 1937 Buffalo nickel showing visible doubling in the obverse date and lettering, collected alongside other notable varieties from the final years of the Buffalo nickel series.

Errors & Varieties
1938-D/S Buffalo Nickel Overmintmark

1938-D/S Buffalo Nickel Overmintmark

The famous final-year Buffalo nickel variety showing a D mintmark punched over a leftover S, created when Denver reused a die originally prepared for San Francisco.

Errors & Varieties
Liberty Head V Nickel

Liberty Head V Nickel

Struck from 1883 to 1912 (with five secretly made 1913 examples), the Liberty Head Nickel is famous for its 1883 'No CENTS' variety and its ultra-rare 1913 issue.

United States
1918/7-D Buffalo Nickel Overdate

1918/7-D Buffalo Nickel Overdate

A famous overdate error on the Buffalo Nickel where a leftover 1917 working die was hand-repunched with an 1918 date, leaving traces of the underlying 7 visible beneath the 8.

Errors & Varieties
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
1885 Liberty Head V Nickel

1885 Liberty Head V Nickel

The key date of the Liberty Head V Nickel series, struck in one of the lowest mintages of the run and highly sought after to complete a date set.

United States
1883 No Cents Liberty Head Nickel

1883 No Cents Liberty Head Nickel

The first-year Liberty Head Nickel design that omitted the word CENTS from the reverse, later infamous as the 'Racketeer Nickel' after being gold-plated and passed off as a five-dollar coin.

United States
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
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
Shield Nickel

Shield Nickel

The first copper-nickel five-cent coin, the Shield Nickel features a national shield on the obverse and was issued from 1866 to 1883, including rare rays and proof-only dates.

United States
Indian Head Cent

Indian Head Cent

A long-running 19th-century one-cent coin depicting Liberty in a Native American-style feathered headdress, popular with collectors for its accessible half-century run.

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
1880 Shield Nickel

1880 Shield Nickel

A major key date of the Shield Nickel series with an extremely low business-strike mintage, making genuine circulated examples much scarcer than the coin's proofs.

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
Bronze Indian Head Cent

Bronze Indian Head Cent

The bronze-alloy Indian Head cent struck from 1864 through 1909, replacing the earlier copper-nickel version and serving as the last cent design before Lincoln's portrait appeared in 1909.

United States
1877 Indian Head Cent

1877 Indian Head Cent

The premier key date of the Indian Head cent series, struck in unusually low numbers during a mid-1870s economic downturn.

United States
1950-D Jefferson Nickel

1950-D Jefferson Nickel

The lowest-mintage business-strike Jefferson Nickel of the entire series, widely hoarded in rolls even as it was released, earning it the nickname the 'King of Jefferson Nickels.'

United States
1867 Shield Nickel No Rays

1867 Shield Nickel No Rays

The revised Shield Nickel design with the rays removed from between the reverse stars, introduced to solve die-breakage problems experienced with the original 1866 design.

United States