🥈

Free Silver Coin Identifier

Identify silver coins — bullion, junk silver, numismatic silver, and sterling — with silver content and melt value. Powered by AI — completely free, no sign-up required.

About This Tool

Silver coins are among the most actively collected and traded in numismatics. Our Silver Coin Identifier recognises silver coins from every era and country — from ancient Greek tetradrachms to modern Silver Eagles — and provides the silver content (purity and weight), current melt value calculation, and numismatic value range. Whether you're assessing junk silver, valuing a collection, or researching a specific date, our AI covers standard silver coinage, trade dollars, crown-sized coins, and modern silver bullion.

📸 Tips for Best Results

  • Silver coins often have a distinctive grey-white patina or toning — this is normal and natural
  • Never clean silver coins with chemicals or abrasives — toning can be valuable and cleaning destroys it
  • Junk silver US coins: pre-1965 dimes, quarters, and half dollars are 90% silver
  • UK pre-1920 coins are 92.5% silver; 1920–1946 coins are 50% silver
  • Modern silver bullion coins (Eagles, Maples, Britannias) are usually .999 fine silver

🏛️ Fascinating Facts

  • The Morgan Silver Dollar (1878–1904, 1921) is the most collected US coin type
  • Junk silver — pre-1965 US coins — contains 0.715 troy ounces of silver per face dollar
  • The largest silver coin ever legally issued was the 2012 Cook Islands Silver Titanic coin — weighing 1 kilogram
  • Silver has been used in coinage for over 2,600 years
  • The 1794 Flowing Hair Silver Dollar may have been the first silver dollar struck by the US Mint — a specimen sold for $10 million in 2013
📸

Upload Photo

Photograph both sides of the coin on a dark background

🤖

AI Analyses

Our AI examines design, lettering, size, and metal

Full Details

Country, year, denomination, mint mark, and estimated value

Frequently Asked Questions

Can it calculate the melt value?

The identification includes silver content by weight and purity. Multiply by the current silver spot price to calculate melt value — spot prices change daily.

How do I tell if a coin is actually silver?

Real silver coins have a distinctive ring when dropped (not a dull thud), don't attract a magnet, and show specific toning patterns. Our AI can confirm silver coins from photos in most cases.

🥈

Ready to identify your coin?

Upload a photo now — completely free, no sign-up, instant results.