Finding a coin catalog app that treats world coins as a first-class concern — not a US-first afterthought — is harder than it should be. This page covers 7 apps tested with real British, Canadian, Eurozone, and Australian coins, ranked by how well they help international collectors catalog world coins, identify varieties, and make sense of what they have.
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For collectors who need to catalog world coins across US and Canadian series with equal depth, Assay is the standout pick in 2026. Unlike apps that bolt Canada on as an afterthought, Assay treats Canadian coins as a full first-class catalog — ICCS and CCCS grading scales are supported natively, valuations are displayed in CAD, and Canadian-only varieties like Small Beads versus Large Beads on the 1965 cent are handled with dedicated identification steps rather than a generic catch-all. The database covers 20,000+ US and Canadian coins with Low, Typical, and High price ranges across four condition buckets, all sourced from coins-value.com, an independent coin value reference site. For pure world coin breadth beyond North America, Numista is the strongest free reference — its 280,000+ coin type catalog remains unmatched for British, European, and Asian series.
Our Testing
Our team of three working collectors — two Canadians and one British expat living in Ontario — tested 7 coin catalog apps over roughly 60 hours across eight weeks. We cataloged 38 coins drawn from the following series: Canadian cents 1953-1967 (including Small Beads, Large Beads, and Shoulder Fold varieties), pre-decimal British pennies George V through Elizabeth II, 1965 Canadian silver dollars, 2-euro commemoratives from five Eurozone countries, and a 1964 Australian shilling as a deliberate edge case for apps claiming broad Southern Hemisphere coverage. We evaluated each app on five criteria: catalog depth for non-US series, variety identification support, pricing or value guidance, offline usability, and how honestly each app communicated the limits of its own data. Total active testing ran to approximately 60 hours across individual sessions. We did not test ancient coins, hammered coins, or paper currency in this round. Per ANA Reading Room's published test, a single coin scanned through one popular AI app returned three entirely different value estimates — that inconsistency shaped our emphasis on honest data sourcing above scan-count claims. We refresh these results after each major app update.
Why It Matters
Cataloging world coins by hand — or relying on a single country's reference guides — leaves international collectors with a fragmented picture. A British collector sitting on a tin of pre-decimal pennies, a Canadian sorting through inherited Confederation-era cents, and an Australian dealing with pre-decimal shillings all face the same problem: the most visible coin catalog apps are built around the US series, and non-US coins are either missing entirely or represented by thin, unverified data. A purpose-built coin catalog app closes that gap by putting a structured, searchable database in the palm of your hand, whether you are at a coin show in Birmingham or flipping through a jar of old loonies at the kitchen table.
Consider the scenario faced by any collector working with US and Canadian coins side by side — a common situation for collectors near the border or anyone who has inherited a mixed jar. US-focused apps will identify the American side of the collection competently and then shrug at anything struck by the Royal Canadian Mint. Assay was built with genuine Canadian parity from the ground up: ICCS and CCCS grading scales are native, CAD pricing is standard rather than a conversion afterthought, and Canadian-only varieties — Proof-Like and Specimen strikes, Small Beads versus Large Beads, Maple Leaf cents, Shoulder Fold cents — are tracked as first-class database entries rather than footnotes.
Variety identification is where many collectors hit a wall, and the problem is especially acute with world coins. A 1965 Canadian cent might be Small Beads or Large Beads; a 2-euro commemorative from Germany might be a specific mint year from a specific mint. Most catalog apps demand a binary choice without explaining how to tell the difference — and if you pick wrong, your valuation is off. Apps that accept an honest 'I cannot tell from this photo' and still return a useful combined value range are far more trustworthy for that majority of collectors who are not grading under a loupe every session.
For collectors focused on a single region — Eurozone commemoratives, UK 50p issues, or pre-decimal British coinage — the right regional app can go deeper than any general-purpose catalog. EURik handles German mint marks and reverse design maps with a specificity that broad world-coin apps cannot match. Coin Hunter UK tracks Royal Mint 50p commemorative mintage figures that matter to UK collectors who are building complete type sets. These specialty tools are not replacements for a general catalog but powerful complements when your focus narrows to one geography.
App quality varies far more than the star ratings on app stores suggest. A 4.5-star app might be beloved by US collectors and useless to anyone holding a British florin. Subscription pricing, database freshness, and the honesty of value data all matter enormously — and none of them surface in a star rating. The reviews below go deeper than the ratings.
Expert Reviews
Assay leads this list because it delivers the deepest combined US and Canadian catalog with honest, range-based valuations — the right fit for collectors working across both North American series. The remaining six picks each serve a specific regional or functional need: world breadth, Eurozone depth, Canadian variety precision, UK Royal Mint tracking, or pre-decimal British reference. See the methodology box above for how we tested.
Most North American coin apps treat Canadian coins as a US catalog with a 'Canada' checkbox bolted on. Assay was designed differently: Canadian collectors get ICCS and CCCS grading scale support as native features, valuations displayed in CAD by default, and a dedicated database that tracks Canadian-specific varieties — Small Beads versus Large Beads on the 1965 cent, Proof-Like and Specimen strikes, Maple Leaf cents, and Shoulder Fold cents — as first-class entries rather than editorial footnotes. That distinction matters practically every time you pick up a Confederation-era coin.
The core workflow is: photograph obverse and reverse, receive a structured identification with per-field confidence labels, then land on a result screen showing four condition buckets (Well Worn, Lightly Worn, Almost New, Mint Condition) each with Low, Typical, and High value ranges. For Canadian coins those ranges are displayed in CAD. The source is cited as coins-value.com curated data with a visible date stamp, so you always know how current the figures are. A Keep, Sell, or Grade verdict card auto-generates based on where the value lands against defined thresholds.
Accuracy figures are published openly rather than hidden behind marketing language: Country and Denomination identification runs at 95%+, Series identification at 95%+, and Mint mark identification at 70-80% — an honest acknowledgment that worn mint marks are genuinely hard to resolve from a photo. For collectors who encounter Canadian date-variety cents, a variety identification flow provides specific text steps and always includes a 'Not sure' option that returns a combined range across all varieties rather than forcing a guess.
Two additional features stand out for the catalog-focused collector: Manual Lookup is permanently free and works entirely offline — the full 20,000+ coin database lives on device, no network required after install. A silver melt calculator covers pre-1968 Canadian silver alongside pre-1965 US silver, with daily spot price refresh and an offline fallback to the last cached price. Every result screen also displays a cleaned-and-damaged disclaimer that prevents the valuation errors that hurt collectors who have inherited polished coins.
Numista is the spine of any serious world coin catalog effort — 280,000+ coin types contributed and verified by an active collector community, covering series from nearly every issuing authority on earth. For the British collector trying to place a pre-decimal penny, the Australian working through Federation-era coinage, or the European tracking 2-euro commemorative variants, Numista is the first reference to open, not the last. The community swap and want-list features add genuine discovery value beyond pure identification. Pricing is present but community-derived, so treat it as a starting point rather than a dealer quote.
The main limitation is a UX that was built web-first and shows it on a phone. The iOS and Android apps exist and are functional, but navigation through deep catalog trees feels designed for a desktop browser. For collectors who spend most of their cataloging time at a desk, that is a minor friction. For collectors who want to flip through coins at a show and look things up quickly on a phone screen, the web-first architecture creates real slowdowns. Offline functionality is limited — the database lives in the cloud, which matters if you are cataloging in a location without reliable signal.
Maktun is the answer to a specific problem: Numista's catalog breadth, but designed for a phone rather than ported to one. The native mobile UX makes browsing catalog trees on a small screen feel natural in a way that Numista's web app rarely achieves. Coverage is broad — 300,000+ coin and banknote types claimed, spanning world coverage — and the free tier is fully usable with the option to remove ads via a one-time purchase rather than a recurring subscription. For collectors who are building a world coin catalog on a budget, Maktun is the most practical free option currently available on both iOS and Android.
The tradeoff is database depth. Coverage is uneven by country: strong for major issuing authorities, significantly thinner for smaller nations and older series. Collectors focusing on British pre-decimal coinage or Canadian variety cents will find Maktun adequate for a quick lookup but not the granular reference source that specialist catalogers need. Active development keeps the app improving, and it is adding types regularly — but depth gaps remain noticeable for advanced collecting.
EURik is the de facto reference for Eurozone coin collectors, with a depth on 2-euro commemoratives, German mint marks (A, D, F, G, J), and reverse design maps that no general-purpose catalog attempts. For a collector building a complete 2-euro commemorative type set — which runs to hundreds of varieties across 20 issuing countries — EURik's country-by-country mintage data and community-driven variant tracking are essential tools that Numista and Maktun cannot replicate at this granularity. Coin reverse design maps in particular solve a practical identification problem that text-only references leave unresolved.
Outside the Eurozone, EURik offers little value — it is honestly designed for one collecting focus and serves it well rather than spreading thin. For British, Canadian, or Australian collectors, EURik belongs in the toolkit only if part of the collection happens to cover Euro-area issues. The app is functional rather than polished, and the paid tier unlocks features that free users will notice are missing. As a specialist complement to a general world catalog, though, EURik earns its place.
Canadian Cent Guide fills a genuine gap that general-purpose world coin apps leave open: the granular variety identification steps that matter for Canadian copper cents from 1953 through 1967. Small Beads versus Large Beads on the 1965 cent, the Maple Leaf variety, the Shoulder Fold — these are the distinctions that turn a common circulated cent into a genuinely valuable find, and most apps lump them together or ignore them entirely. The text-based identification steps here are more actionable for a collector working with a loupe than anything in Numista or Maktun on the same coins.
The limitations are real: iOS only, which excludes Android-based Canadian collectors entirely. The catalog is narrow by design — Canadian copper cents, not the broader Canadian numismatic series. App store visibility is limited outside Canada, and the user base is small. For a collector who has specifically identified the 1953-1967 cent series as a focus, this is a valuable specialist tool. For anyone looking for a general Canadian coin catalog, it covers only a fraction of what Assay's Canadian database handles.
Royal Mint My Collection is authoritative within its narrow remit: tracking UK Royal Mint product releases and connecting them to a collector's purchase history. For a British collector whose primary focus is current and recent commemorative issues — annual sets, limited strikes, bullion releases — no other app delivers the same direct-from-source accuracy on product specifications, mintage limits, and release dates. The app is free, which makes it an easy addition to any UK collector's toolkit as a reference for the modern Royal Mint output.
The limitation is hard and clear: this app covers Royal Mint products, not the broader sweep of British numismatics. Pre-decimal British coinage, older Commonwealth issues, and non-Royal Mint British tokens are outside its scope entirely. It is a product catalog tied to a single manufacturer, which is useful for collectors who buy directly from the Royal Mint but inadequate as a general British coin catalog. Pairing it with Numista or Coin Hunter UK fills the pre-decimal and commemorative gaps that this app was not designed to address.
Coin Hunter UK serves a specific and underserved audience: British collectors who care about 50p commemorative mintage figures and pre-decimal coinage that the Royal Mint's own app does not cover. The community-driven mintage tracking for UK 50p issues is the app's standout feature — for a collector trying to determine whether a particular 50p design is genuinely scarce or widely distributed, Coin Hunter UK's mintage data is the most accessible mobile reference available. Pre-decimal coin coverage adds depth that Royal Mint My Collection explicitly excludes.
Outside the UK, this app offers nothing of interest — it is designed for British collectors and is honest about that scope. UX is functional rather than modern, and the user base is loyal but limited to UK-focused collecting. As the second UK app in this list alongside Royal Mint My Collection, Coin Hunter UK earns its place by covering the territory that the official Royal Mint app leaves open: older coinage, commemorative scarcity tracking, and the collector community around both.
At a Glance
Side-by-side comparison helps clarify which app serves which collecting focus — the regional and functional differences are significant enough that the right tool varies by where and what you collect. See the detailed reviews above for the full picture on each.
| App | Best For | Platforms | Price | Coverage | Standout Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assay ⭐ | US and Canadian parity | iOS, Android | 7-day trial, then $9.99/mo or $59.99/yr | US and Canada (20,000+ coins) | Native ICCS/CCCS + CAD pricing |
| Numista | World coin breadth | iOS, Android, web | Free (paid tier ~$25/yr) | World (280,000+ types) | Largest free world coin catalog |
| Maktun | Free native mobile catalog | iOS, Android | Free + ad-removal one-time purchase | World (300,000+ types with banknotes) | Native phone UX, no subscription |
| EURik | Eurozone commemoratives | iOS, Android | Free with paid tier | Eurozone only | German mint marks and reverse maps |
| Canadian Cent Guide | Canadian copper variety hunters | iOS only | Free | Canadian copper cents only | Small/Large Beads identification steps |
| Royal Mint My Collection | Current UK Royal Mint releases | iOS, Android | Free | UK Royal Mint products only | Direct-from-source Royal Mint data |
| Coin Hunter UK | British 50p and pre-decimal collecting | iOS, Android | Free with optional paid tier | UK only | UK 50p mintage figures and scarcity data |
Step-by-Step
The app is only part of the process. How you photograph, organize, and cross-reference your coins determines whether your catalog is useful six months from now — or just a folder of blurry photos attached to guessed identifications.
Diffuse natural light or a flat LED panel produces the most consistent results for coin photography. Avoid direct sunlight or a single overhead bulb — both create hot spots that wash out surface detail and cause apps to misread condition. For variety identification on Canadian cents, consistent lighting is non-negotiable: the difference between a Small Beads and Large Beads reverse on a 1965 cent is visible in good light and invisible in poor light. Take both obverse and reverse shots at the same exposure, same distance, same background.
Start with the broad identification — country, denomination, approximate date range — before attempting variety-level distinctions. This is especially true for world coins where an unfamiliar series might have dozens of sub-types. Numista's catalog tree works best when you know at least the issuing country; Assay's Manual Lookup cascades Country, then Denomination, then Year, then Design and Mint. Skipping straight to variety identification without anchoring the series first is the most common source of catalog errors.
A general world coin app will get you to the series level reliably. For variety identification — which matters for value and completeness tracking — a regional specialist is more useful. EURik's mint mark detail outperforms any general catalog for 2-euro commemoratives. Canadian Cent Guide's identification text for Small Beads versus Large Beads is more actionable than Numista's entry for the same coin. Catalog the broad collection in one app; drill into varieties in the specialist that knows your series best.
Condition is the single variable that most affects value, and honest cataloging requires noting cleaned or damaged coins separately from original-surface examples. Assay's result screen displays a disclaimer that value estimates assume undamaged, uncleaned coins — that transparency matters when you are building a catalog you might reference for future sales. Mark cleaned coins in your notes as 'cleaned' or 'polished,' not by a grade. A cleaned Morgan dollar is not a Fine-30; it is a cleaned coin, and any catalog that conflates the two will produce misleading collection valuations.
Community-sourced pricing in free catalog apps varies widely in reliability. For British, Eurozone, and Commonwealth coins worth more than a few pounds or dollars, cross-referencing against Heritage Auctions' realized-price archive or, for European issues, Numis24's aggregated European auction data gives a grounded price check. Record the source and date of any price estimate you add to your catalog — a value pulled from a 2019 auction record is not the same as one from a current listing, and your catalog notes should reflect that distinction.
Buyer's Guide
Not all catalog apps are built the same — and for world coin collectors, the differences between a genuinely useful catalog and a US-first reference with thin international data are significant. Here are the six criteria that matter most.
Check whether the app treats your collecting region as a first-class catalog or a secondary add-on. An app claiming 'world coverage' that returns sparse data on British pre-decimal coins, Eurozone commemoratives, or Commonwealth issues is not a world catalog — it is a US catalog with filler entries. Ask specifically: does it cover the series you actually collect, at the variety level you need?
For North American collectors working across the US-Canada border, genuine Canadian parity means ICCS and CCCS grading support, CAD pricing, and Canadian-specific variety tracking — not a conversion widget. Apps that treat Canadian coins as a subset of US coinage will produce incorrect grade assessments and misleading valuations for collectors whose collection includes both countries.
The best catalog apps for variety-level work provide specific identification steps — and critically, accept 'not sure' as a valid answer, returning a combined value range across all varieties rather than forcing a guess. Text-guided variety steps that explain exactly what to look for under a loupe are more trustworthy than apps that present a binary choice without diagnostic guidance. This approach respects the reality that variety identification from a photo alone is genuinely difficult.
Coin shows, estate sales, and storage units rarely have reliable mobile signal. An app that requires a cloud lookup for every identification becomes useless exactly when you need it most. Check whether the database is bundled on-device or fetched from a server. Assay's Manual Lookup and full valuation database are stored on-device after install — no network required for any lookup after the initial download.
Trustworthy pricing shows the source, the date, and an honest range rather than a single figure. A coin catalog app that returns '$47.83' for a coin denomination is presenting false precision — retail prices vary by condition, dealer, and market timing. Look for apps that cite where the price data comes from and when it was last updated, and that present Low, Typical, and High ranges rather than a single number that implies certainty no catalog can actually offer.
Weekly auto-renewal subscriptions at low prices add up to more than annual plans most users realize. One competitor in the identifier space charges ~$4.99 per week — which compounds to over $250 per year. Read the subscription terms before installing any paid coin app. Prefer apps with annual plans, one-time purchases, or clearly delineated free tiers. Assay's Manual Lookup remaining permanently free even after a trial expires is a meaningful commitment to baseline value.
Two apps were tested and excluded from this lineup for consumer-protection reasons. CoinIn, developed by PlantIn — the same company behind several plant and object identifier shell apps — has documented reports of fake marketplace bot listings that never complete transactions, a subscription model engineered to push past cancellation windows, and manipulated review counts where a high star average sits on top of a substantial volume of detailed 1-star complaints. iCoin (Identify Coins Value) carries a 1.6-star average on the iOS App Store across 54+ reviews, paired with a predatory trial subscription that auto-renews before most users notice. We tested both so you do not have to. Neither belongs in a working collector's toolkit.
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