Australian gold coins worth money

australian gold coins worth money

Five rare Australian coins that could make you a small fortune · 2000 'mule' one dollar coin · 2007 'double head' five cent coin · 2010 'upset' 50. Brisbane. Melbourne. Coin Auctions. Coins Worth Money. Coin Worth. Gold And Silver Coins. Old Money. Proof Coins. World Coins. The first, and rarest, issue in​. Oct 18, 2015 - Explore Stuart Roberts's board "Australian rare coins" on Coins Worth Money Australian Gold Kangaroo Coins for Sale · Money Metals®.

Australian gold coins worth money - very valuable

Rare Australian mule $1 coin selling for more than $4000

Crack open your coin jars because you could be sitting on an absolute goldmine!

A rare Australian one dollar coin, known as a ‘mule’, is being sold at auction for more than $4,000.

A mix up at a mint in 2000 created a rare $1/10c hybrid - also called a mule coin - which is valued by rare coin collectors at thousands of times its face value.

And while at first glance, the mule looks like any other gold coin, a closer look reveals a couple of crucial differences, including a double rimmed edge.

The coin was made when a technician at the Royal Australian Mint accidentally paired the kangaroo-patterned ‘tails’ side of the coin with the ‘head’ of a 10c piece, explains the Australian Coin Collecting Blog.

It’s estimated there would be around 6,000 of the mule coins in circulation.

The majority of them wound up in Perth, and while the mule frenzy peaked around 2003/2004, the rare coin is still in circulation.

It’s a timely reminder to check your one dollar coins from now on, as you might just win a jackpot.

Five super rare Aussie coins

Earlier this year, a Melbourne mum revealed how a simple mistake on a batch of one dollar coins could earn you $3000.

That’s not the only potential payday either. There are currently five coins across 20 cent, one dollar and fifty cent denominations that could be worth thousands of dollars.

Find out more in the video below.

2007 ‘double head’ five cent coin

Sometimes the coins that you might not think are worth much are actually worth the most.

The Australian Coin Collecting Blog explains that the ‘double head’ was deliberately paired by a Mint worker using two 2007 head dies. The press was then run, and it’s estimated thousands of coins were printed.

If you come across one, you could earn yourself a massive 299900 per cent return on the face value of the coin.

You can read up more on this coin here and tips on how you can spot it.

More from 7NEWS.com.au

2010 ‘upset’ 50 cent coin

An operator error during a 2010 production run of Australian 50 cent coins where the die was installed incorrectly caused the heads of some coins to be rotated at 30 degrees from the reverse ‘tails’ side of the coin.

There were an estimated 200,000 of these coins in circulation.

It might be a very hard to spot the error, but some of these coins have previously sold for $50 on eBay.

You can read more on The Australian Coin Collecting blog here.

2000 ‘incuse flag’ 50 cent coin

The 50 cent ‘millennium’ coin is one of the hardest errors to spot and is also known as the ‘incuse flag millennium’ coin.

The mistake affects the Cross of St. Andrew on the Union Jack which is sunk into the coin rather than raised in the widely circulated version.

It’s believed that there are only around 200,000 of these coins in public with a value of around $50.

More from 7NEWS.com.au

1966 wavy baseline 20 cent coin

On most Australian 20 cent coins, the base of the number two is a straight line. But in a series of coins released in 1966, the base has a slight curve in the shape of a wave.

Though it’s a minor detail, it can multiply its value to collectors hundred-fold.

One of the coins is selling on eBay for $300, with members in a coin collecting Facebook group saying the same coin could go for up to $800.

More from 7NEWS.com.au

The Royal Australian Mint, which manufactures Australia’s coins, says it tries to limit mistakes or misprints and understands why “error coins” become circulated.

However, even with the strict screening process, it’s impossible to say exactly how many have made their way into Aussie wallets.

“Due to the rarity of these coins, avid coin collectors are continually on the hunt in effort to add these valuable coins to their collections,” a spokeswoman for the Mint previously told 7NEWS.com.au.

Источник: https://7news.com.au/business/finance/rare-australian-mule-1-coin-selling-for-more-than-4000-c-1313050

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