Coin Collecting Terms

Like any hobby, coin collecting – or numismatics – has a language of its own. But don’t let numismatic jargon trouble you. Below, you’ll find a handy glossary of coin collecting terms you may encounter as you grow your collection.

Alloy
– A mixture of two or more metals.
Assay
– To analyze and determine the purity of metal.
Bag Mark
– A mark on a coin from contact with other coins in a mint bag.
Bank Note
– A form of legalized paper currency issued by a bank.
Bullion
– Precious metal in the form of coins, bars, ingots, etc.
Business Strike
– A coin intended for circulation (as opposed to a Proof coin made specially for collectors).
Bust
– A portrait on a coin, usually including the head, neck and upper shoulders.
Clad Coinage
– Coins with a core and outer layer of differing substances. Most modern U.S. dimes, quarters and half dollars feature a clad composition.
Collar
– A metal piece that restrains the expanding metal of a planchet during striking, and creates the 3rd side of a coin (edge).
Commemorative
– A coin of special design, issued to honor an outstanding person, place or event in history.
Condition
– The physical state of a coin.
Counterfeit
– A coin imitating a genuine article and intended to deceive.
Currency
– Any medium of exchange including coins, paper money and other items of value used in daily commerce.
Date Collecting
– Building a collection of coins containing one issue from each year, regardless of the mint. With date collecting, you can assemble one coin from each year of a particular series, or of a particular denomination.
Date and Mint Mark Collecting
– Very popular, and considered by many the most challenging. A date and mint mark collection consists of one coin from each U.S. Mint and each year for a particular series. Many series have a hard-to-find date that can be expensive.
Denomination
– The value represented by specific currency, such as a nickel, dime or dollar.
Designer
– The artist who creates a coin’s design (but may not engrave the dies).
Device
– A symbol or figure on a coin.
Die
– A piece of metal bearing the design of the coin. Two dies (front and back) come together against a coin blank to strike a finished coin.
Edge
– The narrow “third side” of a coin on which it would roll.
Encapsulated coin
– A coin that has been independently certified and encapsulated in a sonically sealed holder. The holder has a bar-coded identification insert that notes the coin, variety, date and grade.
Engraver
– The person who cuts the design into a coinage die (not necessarily the designer)
Error
– A coin improperly produced but not detected, and released by the mint.
Face Value
– The sum for which a coin can be spent or exchanged (a dime’s face value is 10¢), as opposed to its collector or precious metal value.
Field
– The portion of a coin’s surface not used for design or inscription.
Fractional Currency
– Paper money issued in denominations of 3¢, 5¢, 10¢, 15¢, 25¢ and 50¢ from 1863-1876.
Grade
– Condition or amount of wear a coin has experienced.
Hairlines
– Minute lines or scratches, often caused by cleaning or polishing.
Incuse
– The design of a coin that has been impressed below the coin’s surface, rather than raised above the surface.
Inscription
– The lettering that runs across the fields of a coin.
Intrinsic Value
(melt value) – Refers to the value of the metal in a coin.
Key Date
– A scarce, more elusive date required to complete a collection.
Legal Tender
– A coin, note, or other article issued by a government as official money.
Legend
– The lettering that circles a coin’s fields just inside its borders.
Medal
– A metal object resembling a coin but not of legal tender status.
Mint
– A facility that produces coins.
Mint Luster
– The dull, frosty, or satiny shine or finish found on coins, resulting from the centrifugal flow of metal as dies strike the coin blank.
Mint Mark
– A small letter that identifies the mint that struck the coin.
Mint Set
– Uncirculated set of coins of each denomination from a particular mint.
Mint State
– Same as Uncirculated.
Mintage
– The quantity of coins produced.
Motto
– A phrase or slogan on a coin that is often political or religious, and meaningful to a particular country.
Numismatics
– The study and collecting of coins or articles used as money.
Obsolete
– A coin design or type that is no longer produced.
Obverse
– The front (or "heads") side of a coin, which usually features the date and the principal design.
Paper Money
– Any currency made of paper or similar woven material (U.S. issues include obsolete Silver Certificates and current Federal Reserve Notes).
Pattern
– An experimental or trial piece, generally of a new design or metal.
Planchet
– The blank piece of metal on which a coin design is stamped.
Proof
– A method of manufacture by which coins are made using highly polished planchets and dies, often struck twice to accent the design.
Proof Set
– A complete set of Proof coins of every denomination made in a year.
Reeding
– A design made up of vertical striations applied to the circumference of the coin’s edge. The product of semi- and fully-automatic coining machines developed in the late 18th century, reeding helps to deter clipping.
Relief
– Any part of a design that is raised above the coin’s surface is in relief.
Restrike
– A coin minted after the year of its date from the original dies.
Reverse
– The back (or "tails") side of a coin.
Rim
– The raised circumference of a coin’s obverse and reverse, circling the design and protecting it from wear (not to be confused with “edge”).
Roll
– Coins packaged by banks or dealers in quantities: 50 cents, 40 nickels, etc.
Series
– All dates and mint marks of a specific design and denomination.
Staining
– A white to yellow coloration which occurs naturally during the minting process, commonly found on uncirculated silver coins.
Strike
– The process of stamping a coin blank with a die bearing the design.
Toning
– Coloration from chemical reaction to the air or other materials over time.
Type Collecting
– Assembling one coin of each design and denomination.
Uncirculated
– Without rub, friction or wear from circulation.
Variety
– A minor change from the basic design type of a coin.
Year Set
– Collection including at least one coin from each year within a series. May include coins from a single mint, or coins bearing different mint marks.