Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

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

Umayyad Silver Dirham

Umayyad Silver Dirham

A silver coin of the Umayyad Caliphate struck after Caliph Abd al-Malik's monetary reform, bearing only Arabic inscriptions and setting the template for centuries of Islamic coinage.

World
Islamic Gold Dinar (Umayyad)

Islamic Gold Dinar (Umayyad)

The first purely epigraphic Islamic gold coin, introduced by Caliph Abd al-Malik around 696 AD, replacing figural Byzantine-style imagery with Quranic inscriptions.

Ancient
Persian Sassanid Silver Drachm

Persian Sassanid Silver Drachm

The standard silver coin of the Sasanian Persian Empire, showing an elaborately crowned royal bust and a Zoroastrian fire altar with attendants, struck for over four centuries.

Ancient
Sassanian Silver Drachm

Sassanian Silver Drachm

The standard silver coin of the Sasanian Persian Empire, featuring an elaborately crowned king's portrait and a Zoroastrian fire altar with attendants, struck for over four centuries.

Ancient
Abbasid Gold Dinar

Abbasid Gold Dinar

The standard gold coin of the Abbasid Caliphate centered on Baghdad, inscribed entirely in Arabic script and struck for roughly five centuries across a vast Islamic empire.

World
Korean 5 Yang Silver Dollar (1892)

Korean 5 Yang Silver Dollar (1892)

Korea's first Western-style, dollar-sized silver coin, struck in 1892 with a coiled dragon design as part of King Gojong's currency modernization.

Asian
Cartwheel Twopence (1797)

Cartwheel Twopence (1797)

An enormous two-ounce copper twopence struck in 1797, the largest coin ever produced for circulation in Britain, made famous for its heavy raised cartwheel-style rim.

British
Vermont Copper

Vermont Copper

Copper coinage struck under authority of the independent Vermont Republic in the 1780s, featuring an early landscape design and later a Britannia-style type.

United States
Panormus Siculo-Punic Tetradrachm

Panormus Siculo-Punic Tetradrachm

A silver tetradrachm struck at Panormus under Carthaginian control in Sicily, blending Greek artistic style with Punic legends, a hallmark of the distinctive Siculo-Punic coinage series.

Ancient
Chinese Szechuan Rupee (Tibet-related)

Chinese Szechuan Rupee (Tibet-related)

Silver rupee struck by China's Szechuan provincial mint to compete with British Indian rupees circulating in Tibet, blending a Chinese ruler's portrait with an Indian-style coin format.

Asian
Rama IV Siamese Baht (first machine-struck)

Rama IV Siamese Baht (first machine-struck)

Landmark Siamese silver coin introduced under King Mongkut (Rama IV), marking the country's shift from traditional bullet-shaped money to modern, flat, machine-struck coinage.

Asian
1909-S Indian Head Cent

1909-S Indian Head Cent

The final and lowest-mintage Indian Head cent, struck at the San Francisco Mint in the series' last year before the Lincoln cent debuted.

United States
Indian Gold Mohur

Indian Gold Mohur

The traditional high-value gold coin of the Indian subcontinent, struck for centuries by Mughal emperors, later by the British East India Company, British India, and various princely states.

Asian
Indian Head Half Eagle ($5)

Indian Head Half Eagle ($5)

A uniquely designed gold five-dollar coin featuring an incuse (recessed) design by Bela Lyon Pratt, the only U.S. circulating coin ever struck this way.

United States
Indian Head Gold Eagle ($10)

Indian Head Gold Eagle ($10)

A striking early 20th-century $10 gold coin designed under President Theodore Roosevelt's coinage renaissance, featuring an incuse (recessed) design and a Native American-style Liberty portrait.

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
1908-S Indian Head Cent

1908-S Indian Head Cent

The first Indian Head cent struck at the San Francisco Mint, marking the first time a branch mint produced a one-cent coin for the United States.

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
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
Constantine Sol Invictus Follis

Constantine Sol Invictus Follis

A common bronze follis of Constantine the Great honoring Sol Invictus, the radiate sun god, struck empire-wide before his turn toward Christianity.

Ancient
Type 2 Indian Princess Gold Dollar

Type 2 Indian Princess Gold Dollar

A short-lived, notoriously weakly struck redesign of the U.S. gold dollar, prized today for its brief production window and the striking difficulties that led to its quick replacement.

United States
1859 Indian Head Cent (Laurel Wreath)

1859 Indian Head Cent (Laurel Wreath)

The first-year Indian Head cent, struck only in 1859 with a distinctive laurel wreath reverse that was replaced by an oak wreath and shield the following year.

United States
Indian Punch-Marked Karshapana

Indian Punch-Marked Karshapana

Among the earliest coins of South Asia, irregular silver bars struck repeatedly with multiple unrelated symbol punches rather than a single unified design.

Ancient
Netherlands East Indies VOC Duit

Netherlands East Indies VOC Duit

Copper coin struck by the Dutch East India Company (VOC) for circulation in its Asian trading territories, a common relic of 18th-century colonial commerce.

Asian