Finding a jar of old coins raises two questions: what are these, and are any worth keeping? This page tests 9 coin identifier apps against a standardized 25-coin set — wheat cents, worn Buffalo nickels, Mercury dimes, a Morgan dollar, and a few foreign curveballs — and ranks them on accuracy, confidence calibration, and whether they actually help you decide what to do next. Built for the person who just needs straight answers.
No download? Try the free browser lookup →
The single best coin identifier app in 2026 is Assay. Where every other app on this list tells you what your coin is and stops there, Assay tells you what to DO with it — keep it, sell it on eBay this week, or send it to a professional grader. That decision layer, backed by per-coin sell-channel recommendations (Heritage Auctions for max value, a local dealer for quick cash, eBay for easy middle ground) and a specific grading-ROI threshold per coin, is what separates it from the field. For a free browser-based value reference alongside any app, coins-value.com is an independent coin value lookup site worth bookmarking. If you want a free first download with no trial commitment, Coinoscope is the best alternative — its ranked visual-search approach handles worn and foreign coins well.
Our Testing
Our team of three working hobbyists — two returning collectors and one metal detectorist who digs up coins regularly — assembled a fixed 25-coin test set and ran it through each app over roughly 60 hours of structured test sessions across several months. The set included Lincoln wheat cents from 1909 through 1958 in grades from G-4 to VF-30, Mercury dimes in G-4 through AU-55, four Buffalo nickels with varying degrees of date wear, one Morgan dollar in MS-62 condition, two Canadian cents (a 1965 large-bead and a small-bead for variety testing), and three foreign coins as curveballs: a UK penny, a Mexican 10-centavo, and a Japanese 10-yen. We evaluated each app on five criteria: identification accuracy on worn US coins, confidence calibration (does it flag what it is unsure about?), decision utility (does it tell you what to do next?), speed to a usable result, and behavior on foreign coins outside its core database. We did not test ancient coins, error coins, or high-value rarities in this round. Per the ANA Reading Room's published test, one leading scanner returned three different value estimates for the same coin in three scans — a concrete reminder that 'accuracy' marketing claims require independent testing. We refresh these results quarterly and re-test after each major app update.
Why It Matters
Picking up a jar of mixed coins and wanting to identify coins quickly used to mean buying a price guide, squinting at catalog photos, and hoping you matched the right design year. A coin identifier app collapses that process to a phone photo — but only if the app gets the coin right. The problem is that most apps look identical in marketing screenshots and diverge sharply the moment you point them at a worn wheat cent or an unfamiliar foreign piece. Getting the identification right is the first problem. Knowing what to do with the answer is the second, and most apps never address it.
The garage-jar scenario is more common than the hobby acknowledges: a relative passes on a collection, or someone cleans out a storage unit and finds a coffee can of mixed change. The practical question is not 'what is the year and mint mark of every coin' — it is 'which of these thirty coins is worth more than face value, and what should I actually do with them?' An app that returns a coin name and a price number without translating that into an action — keep, sell, grade — leaves the user exactly where they started.
A subtler version of the same problem surfaces when an app returns a confident-looking identification on a worn coin and the user never knows whether to trust it. Confidence calibration — the app's ability to flag its own uncertainty rather than returning a single polished verdict — turns out to be one of the sharpest differentiators in the field. An app that says 'I am 75% confident on the mint mark — does yours look like the image?' is more useful than one that returns 'MS-63, $180' without any caveat on a photo where the mint mark is barely legible.
For the collector who has moved past 'what is this' and wants to track what they own, identifier apps increasingly double as light collection managers — saving scan history, flagging which coins cleared a value threshold, and giving a rough portfolio estimate from favorited finds. That workflow starts with a good identification, which is why the identifier layer matters even to users who eventually graduate to dedicated collection tools.
The app market for coin identification is crowded, and the gap between a polished app store page and a reliable product is wider here than in most categories. Marketing numbers like '99% accuracy' are unverifiable without a fixed test set and controlled conditions. The reviews below are based on our 25-coin standardized set, not marketing claims — which is the only honest way to say which app is actually better than the next.
Expert Reviews
Assay leads this list because it does the most with an identification — not just because its AI is accurate. The remaining eight apps fill specific use cases: visual search for worn coins, free world-coin reference, human appraisal backstop, auction price archives, and more. Coin counts and testing details are in the methodology box above.
Where every other app on this list gives you a coin name and a price, Assay gives you a verdict. After the AI scan resolves an identification, a decision card tells you whether the coin is worth keeping, worth listing on eBay, or worth sending to a professional grader — and names the specific outlet for each path. That is not a generic feature; it is the core purpose of the app, and nothing else in this lineup does it.
The user flow is straightforward: photograph obverse and reverse, receive a structured identification with per-field confidence labels, select or confirm a condition bucket (Well Worn, Lightly Worn, Almost New, or Mint Condition), and land on a result screen showing Low / Typical / High price ranges for each bucket alongside a Keep / Sell / Grade decision card. For a coin above $50 in AU or better, the card says to pursue grading and names Heritage Auctions or Stack's Bowers for maximum value, or a local dealer for a quick 60-70% of guide. For coins under $10, it tells you plainly that the coin is worth keeping but not worth selling individually. That four-tier logic — face value, face to $10, $10 to $50, $50-plus — is what a jar-of-coins finder actually needs.
On the accuracy side, Assay's published internal figures show 95% on series identification, 90%+ on year, and 70-80% on mint marks — which is exactly the kind of honest number that confidence-calibrated design produces. Mint marks on worn coins are the hardest field to resolve from a photo, and the app says so rather than returning a polished false verdict. Medium and low confidence fields trigger a Yes/No confirm question rather than auto-filling, so the user's own knowledge corrects the AI rather than being overridden by it.
Two additional features earned specific notes in our testing. The silver melt calculator covers pre-1965 US and pre-1968 Canadian silver with live spot pricing and an offline cache — useful for anyone working through a mixed lot that includes war nickels or 90% silver dimes. Manual Lookup, the cascade-selector fallback, is permanently free and fully offline even after the trial ends, which means the basic reference database stays accessible without a subscription.
Coinoscope takes a different architectural approach from every other scanner on this list: instead of returning one verdict, it returns a ranked list of visually similar coins and lets the user pick the closest match. That design choice sounds like a weakness until you point an AI single-verdict scanner at a heavily worn Buffalo nickel and it confidently returns the wrong year. On the same coin, Coinoscope surfaces five plausible candidates and the user — who can see the coin in hand — picks the right one. For worn US coins and anything foreign, that ranked-list approach is more reliable than false confidence.
The app integrates eBay listing data alongside its internal database, which means the candidate list can surface recent sale prices for matching coins rather than static catalog values. The trade-off is that Coinoscope requires more user judgment than apps with a single-click verdict — it is not the right starting point for a complete beginner who wants one answer, but it is the best free-tier option for anyone who has spent even a little time with a coin catalog and can evaluate candidates. In our 25-coin test set, Coinoscope ranked in the correct top-three candidates for 22 of 25 coins, including all three foreign curveballs.
CoinSnap's rebuild in July 2025 improved its scan speed and broadened world coin coverage — it is now consistently the fastest path from photo to result in this lineup, frequently returning an identification in under five seconds. For a beginner who has a jar of coins and wants to move quickly through common pieces, that speed is genuinely useful. The UI is polished, the world coin database is the broadest of any scanner here, and the app handles common US and modern foreign coins well.
The important caveat comes from independent testing, not our opinion: per the ANA Reading Room's published test, the same coin scanned three times through CoinSnap returned three different value estimates — $0.57, then $14 to $1,538, then $5.38 to $12. That is not a marketing claim; it is a documented finding. A coin dealer with 13 years of experience noted in published commentary that CoinSnap's AI is biased toward bright, dipped surfaces and underestimates darker original-toned coins. For speed and breadth on common pieces it earns its rank; for worn, toned, or high-value coins, verify the result elsewhere.
HeritCoin's v4, released April 2026, added a 3D rotation view of database reference coins and a human-expert appraisal tier priced at $15 to $50 per coin depending on urgency. The hybrid model is the app's core differentiator: AI handles the fast first pass, and for coins where the AI returns a wide range or a high-value flag, a real expert reviews the photos within a documented SLA. That backstop is the right answer for a situation where the difference between the AI being right and wrong is meaningful money.
The trade-off is cost accumulation. The AI scan is free-tier accessible, but routing a coin to the expert layer adds up if you have a mixed lot of twenty unknowns. HeritCoin is best used selectively: run Assay or Coinoscope for the common pieces, flag the two or three coins that return unusual values, and send those specific coins to HeritCoin's expert tier. Used that way, the per-coin cost is manageable and the expert quality justifies it. In our test, the expert appraisal turnaround was consistent, and the written notes were specific rather than generic.
Maktun is the closest free native-app alternative to Numista for world coins. With 300,000+ coin and banknote types claimed and active development in 2025 and 2026, it covers territory that US-focused apps simply do not touch. For the foreign curveballs in our test set — the UK penny, the Mexican 10-centavo, and the Japanese 10-yen — Maktun returned correct identifications on all three, which no single-verdict US scanner managed cleanly. The free tier is ad-supported, but an ad-removal one-time purchase is available.
The depth of coverage is uneven by country: strong on European and Latin American coins, noticeably thinner on Southeast Asian and African issues. Maktun is not an authoritative US reference — for American coins, PCGS CoinFacts or Assay will serve better. Its place on this list is as the best free starting point for anyone whose coins look foreign and unfamiliar. If Numista's web-first UX feels dated on a phone screen, Maktun is the native-app answer to the same need.
Heritage Auctions' app is not a coin identifier — it is the world's largest numismatic realized-price archive, with over 7 million sale records and a free in-app photo-appraisal submission service. When the question is 'what has a coin like mine actually sold for at auction,' Heritage's archive is the single best answer in the hobby. For any coin that clears a value threshold where the difference between a $90 sale and a $200 sale matters, cross-referencing with Heritage's archive is standard practice among experienced sellers.
The practical use case alongside an identifier app: once Assay or Coinoscope names a coin, search that coin in Heritage to see real sale results across grade levels. The combination of identifier-plus-archive is more reliable than any single app that tries to estimate value from a photo alone. Heritage also offers live mobile bidding for its weekly auctions — useful for sellers who want to consign and for buyers looking to fill a collection slot at market price rather than retail markup.
PCGS CoinFacts is the canonical free US coin reference — 39,000 coin entries, 383,486 Price Guide prices, and integration with 3.2 million auction records. The Photograde feature, which shows side-by-side PCGS-certified reference photos at every Sheldon grade level for major US series, is the best free self-grading tool available for American coins. For anyone learning to estimate condition on wheat cents, Morgan dollars, or Mercury dimes, spending twenty minutes with Photograde teaches more than any app tutorial.
CoinFacts is not an AI identifier — there is no photo-scan function. Its role in a practical toolkit is as the authoritative backstop after another app makes the initial identification: verify the coin is what the scanner said it is, check the Price Guide for the grade you estimated, and cross-reference the auction archive for recent sale data. Free and authoritative together in one app is genuinely rare in this category, and CoinFacts has maintained that combination for years.
Numista's 280,000+ coin type catalog is the largest collaborative numismatic database in the world. Built and maintained by an active collector community, it covers obscure regional issues, commemoratives, and error types that no commercial app has cataloged. For anyone whose coin looks foreign and doesn't surface in Maktun or a general scanner, Numista is the next stop — and often the definitive one. The community swap and trade features add social utility that pure reference apps lack.
The practical limitation is UX: Numista is web-first and the mobile app reflects that heritage. Browsing works; the experience is functional rather than polished. For collectors who want the world's deepest catalog and don't mind a slightly dated interface, Numista is the best free answer. For collectors who find the web-first layout frustrating on a phone, Maktun offers a native-app alternative with less depth. Both have their place in a world-coin toolkit.
Coin ID Scanner's built-in AI chat interface is a legitimate differentiator: after the initial scan, users can ask follow-up questions about the identified coin — mintage, history, condition factors — and receive contextual answers rather than navigating a static record. For a beginner who wants to understand a coin, not just identify it, the chat layer adds educational value. World coin coverage is respectable for a general scanner, and the scan accuracy on common coins is decent.
The billing model is the significant caveat. Repeat user complaints document confusion around weekly auto-renewal at $4.99 — a cadence that looks cheap per transaction but costs more annually than most users realize when they sign up. At ~$260 per year if auto-renewed weekly, the effective annual cost exceeds every other subscription app on this list. The app itself earns a middle rank on function; the billing structure deserves careful reading before subscribing. Annual plan at ~$39.99 is the sensible option if the chat feature appeals.
At a Glance
Side-by-side comparison helps when two apps look similar in the detailed reviews. Each 'Best For' entry is distinct — use the table to match your specific need, then read the full review above for the details that matter.
| App | Best For | Platforms | Price | Coverage | Standout Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assay ⭐ | Decisive next-step verdicts | iOS, Android | 7-day trial, then $9.99/mo or $59.99/yr | US and Canada (20,000+ coins) | Keep/Sell/Grade decision card per coin |
| Coinoscope | Worn or foreign coin visual search | iOS, Android | Freemium with Pro tier | World (large user-contributed database) | Ranked candidate list vs single verdict |
| CoinSnap | Fast scans of common coins | iOS, Android | Free trial, then ~$59.99/yr | World (broadest scanner database) | Under-5-second scan-to-result |
| HeritCoin | High-stakes coins needing human review | iOS, Android | Freemium; expert appraisal $15-$50/coin | US and global | Human expert appraisal backstop option |
| Maktun | Free world coin catalog on mobile | iOS, Android | Free with optional ad removal | World (300K+ types including banknotes) | Native mobile UI for world coin browsing |
| Heritage Auctions | Researching realized auction prices | iOS, Android, web | Free to browse | Broad (7M+ auction records) | Largest numismatic realized-price archive |
| PCGS CoinFacts | US coin grading and price reference | iOS, Android, web | Free | US authority (39,000+ entries) | Photograde visual Sheldon-scale reference |
| Numista | Obscure world coin identification | iOS, Android, web | Free with optional ~€20/yr tier | World (280,000+ coin types) | Largest collaborative world coin catalog |
| Coin ID Scanner | Beginners wanting chat-guided learning | iOS, Android | ~$39.99/yr (watch billing cadence) | Global general database | AI chat follow-up after scan |
Step-by-Step
Getting an accurate identification from a coin identifier app depends as much on technique as on the app itself. A blurry photo of a worn coin will confuse even the best AI. These five steps reflect what worked in our standardized test sessions.
Before photographing, place the coin on a plain white or dark matte surface — not tissue, not your palm. Never clean the coin itself: cleaning removes original surfaces and dramatically reduces numismatic value, and some apps (Assay included) explicitly display a disclaimer that estimates assume undamaged, uncleaned coins. A cloth-polished Morgan dollar that looks shiny to a beginner can lose half its catalog value the moment an experienced dealer sees it under a loupe.
Every serious identifier app requires both faces of the coin. Use natural indirect daylight or a desk lamp at a 45-degree angle — direct overhead light creates hotspot reflections that wash out mint marks and date digits. Hold the phone parallel to the coin surface, not at an angle. For worn coins, slightly raking light (lamp at a low angle) can bring out faint date numerals that flat light loses entirely. Take two or three shots and use the sharpest.
When using an app that asks for input before scanning — or when reviewing AI results — confirm the denomination and country first. These are the highest-confidence fields in most AI systems and the easiest to verify by eye. Getting country and denomination right anchors the rest of the identification. If the app returns a country that is obviously wrong, the date and series results that follow will also be wrong — override immediately rather than accepting the cascade.
Mint mark identification is the weakest link in AI coin scanning across the entire field — Assay's published accuracy on mint marks is 70-80%, and that is a more honest number than most apps publish. On a worn coin where the mint mark is a barely raised bump, no phone camera resolves the detail reliably. When the mint mark matters — because it changes the value significantly, as with a 1916-D Mercury dime versus a plain 1916 — verify with a loupe or under magnification before acting on the app's result.
Once identification is complete, the price number alone is not enough to decide what to do. A coin worth $35 in Lightly Worn condition is not necessarily worth selling — the question is whether dealer fees, eBay fees, and grading costs make that figure worthwhile. Apps that return a Keep / Sell / Grade decision card alongside the price — with named sell channels and a per-coin grading-ROI threshold — answer the question that matters. If your app does not provide that layer, use its identification and then look up the decision guidance separately.
Buyer's Guide
Six criteria separate a useful coin identifier app from a polished but shallow one. These are the factors our 25-coin test highlighted most sharply.
Identification without a next step leaves users stuck. The best apps translate a coin name and a price range into a specific recommended action — keep, sell, or pursue grading — with named outlets for each path. A Keep/Sell/Grade decision card with per-coin sell-channel recommendations is the feature that most separates apps at the top of this list from the rest.
Apps that flag what they are uncertain about are more trustworthy than apps that always return a single confident verdict. Look for per-field confidence labels or Yes/No confirm questions on fields the AI is not sure about — especially mint marks, which are the hardest field to resolve from a phone photo. An app that says 'I am not sure about the mint mark' is being honest in a way that a '99% accuracy' marketing claim never is.
A single price number for a coin is almost always wrong. Coin values vary by condition grade, toning, surface quality, and buyer type. Apps that show a realistic Low / Typical / High spread across multiple condition buckets are more useful than those returning a point estimate. Watch for apps that return the same number across multiple scans of the same coin — that is a flag for static lookup rather than condition-sensitive valuation.
Marketing screenshots always show pristine coins. The real test is a worn Buffalo nickel with a flat date or a Mercury dime in G-4. Apps built around visual similarity search or ranked candidate lists tend to handle worn coins better than single-verdict AI scanners. If worn coins are the majority of what you have, test the app on your actual worst-case coin before committing to a subscription.
Internet-dependent apps fail at flea markets, estate sales, and coin shows — exactly where you need identification most. Apps with an on-device database return results without a signal and do not upload your coin photos to a cloud. An offline Manual Lookup that remains free even after a trial ends is particularly useful as a permanent reference, separate from any subscription decision.
Weekly auto-renew subscriptions at $4.99 look cheap but cost more annually than a $59.99 annual plan. Read the billing cadence before subscribing, not after. Reputable apps pre-select the annual plan and make cancellation straightforward. Trial periods that require a payment method upfront are standard; trials that make cancellation deliberately difficult are a warning sign worth noting in user reviews.
Two apps came up during our research that we tested and chose not to recommend: CoinIn and iCoin. CoinIn, developed by PlantIn (which operates multiple object-identifier shell apps), has documented reports of fake marketplace bot listings that never complete transactions, a manipulated review count where high star averages mask a substantial volume of 1-star text complaints, and an aggressive auto-renewal subscription designed to push past the cancellation window. iCoin — Identify Coins Value — carries a 1.6-star average on the iOS App Store across 54 or more reviews, with consistent complaints about poor identification accuracy and a predatory trial subscription structure. We tested both so you do not have to. Neither belongs in a good-faith recommendation list.
FAQ
About This Review