Rarest £1 coins revealed with some worth as much as £50
Customers are being advised to check their £1 coins carefully
More than a billion brand new £1 coins are due to be released on 28 March. The 12-sided coin, described by the Royal Mint as “the most secure coin in the world”, will replace the traditional circular £1.
With just under five weeks to go, the Treasury and money experts have urged the British public to spend or exchange their round pounds before they cease being legal tender. However, before rushing to the bank, money specialist website Change Checker is advising customers to check their £1 coins carefully.
They could be sitting on a small fortune.
That’s because as the round £1 coin disappears from our change forever, collectors are desperate to complete a collection of all 24 designs.
In its “Scarcity Index”, Change Checker has identified 24 of the rarest £1 coins to have ever circulated the UK.
Some are worth as much as £50 each.
Scaled from 100 to 1, the scores represent the relative scarcity of each coin, with 100 being the most scarce.
The rarest coin on the index is the Edinburgh, which is already achieving prices of between £10 and £15 on eBay and could soon be fetching between £25 and £50, according to the website.
The 2011 Cardiff City £1 coin – second on the scarcity index – is already selling for £20 on eBay with Change Checker predicting its value will climb.
The £1 coin was introduced in 1983, with a total of 2.2 billion having been struck for circulation since, according to Change Checker.
The last available figures, published by the Royal Mint in 2014, suggested that 1.55 billion £1 coins are in circulation.
Last year, a 2p coin sold for almost £1,400 at auction because it was silver instead of the more conventional copper.
Meanwhile, the Bank of England’s first ever polymer notes were selling for up to £800 on eBay or more than 160 times its face value.
The 2016 banknote beauty pageant
Show all 6The website also gives collectors tips to find all 24 circulating £1 coin designs before they are replaced.
- Check your change drawer or change pot
- Ask friends and family
- Go to the bank and change notes to £1 coins
- Swap with the Change Checker web app – changechecker.org
- Befriend the local corner shop or launderette owner and ask them for their £1 coins
- Seek out arcade or bingo change machines
- Pay with a note and round up with loose change to maximise your £1 coin change
- Look for Facebook swap groups
- Raid your children’s piggy banks (and replace them with notes!)
- Look for abandoned supermarket trolleys
- Check down the back of the sofa
- Check old handbags
- Set up a lottery syndicate and collect the payments in round £1 coins
- Have a bake sale and charge £1 for everything
- Offer to count up any collections and swap out the £1 coins for notes
- Car boot sale – everything is “One Round Pound”
- Pay car park charges in notes and receive the change in coins
- Check any tips your friends might be leaving at restaurants
- Always carry some £1 coins with you so you can swap any time you see a good one
- Check gym lockers
- Try to build a collection as a group – e.g. a school class – 30 Change Checkers are better than 1!
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