Kew Gardens 50p

The second Kew Gardens 50 pence coin sold for £122.00 I'm just a collector of coins, not a slave to it, unless I am in a coin shop. For all you banknote collectors. The sought-after Kew Gardens 50p coin has been revealed as the rarest in circulation by the Royal Mint. According to the top 10 rankings, released ahead of the 50th anniversary of decimilisation.

  1. Kew Gardens 50p
  2. 2009 Kew Gardens 50p Worth
  3. Kew Gardens London
  4. Kew Gardens 50p Coin
  5. Kew Gardens 50p Value

How much is it worth?

Collector Value:£156.25 is a mid-point price for Kew Gardens 50p coins marked as sold on eBay UK. The price range for a good condition circulated example of this 50p coin is between £150.89 and £161.50.

Coin values based on 171 eBay sales selected from data collected 19/01/2021 19:49:34.

How rare is this coin?

Scarcity:210,000Kew gardens 50p for sale Kew Gardens 50p coins were struck for circulation showing the date 2009. 50p mintage figures are from The Royal Mint website, this coin design can be found in your change.

Kew Gardens 50p

The rare Kew Gardens 50p coin is hugely popular, and consequently, there are many fakes in circulation. Here’s how to tell whether you have the real deal.

The Kew Gardens 50p is one of the best-known rare coins around.

With a sale of a Kew Gardens 50p for £91 on eBay in May (read here for why sales rather than listings are important), it’s no wonder collectors love this coin.

Plus, because it was only produced in 2009, it’s possible that you have one in your wallet.

Unfortunately, although 210,000 of these coins were originally issued, there’s a large number of fakes out there in circulation.

We’ve teamed up with the Fake Pound Coin Database to tell the fakes from the real deal.

If you think you’ve got another rare 50p coin or a rare £1 coin, click on the links to find out more.

50p

The real deal

Kew

Firstly, (re)acquaint yourself with what a genuine Kew Gardens coin looks like:

The fakes

Spotting a fake is tricky because there’s a wide variety of them.

Below are just a few of the examples listed by the Fake Pound Coin Database, with notes below on why they’re fakes.

The frosted portrait and design is a giveaway that this is a fake – however, there are also design elements in the pagoda and Queen’s head (explained below).

The Fake Pound Coin Database describes this as a “quite an obvious fake” due to its deep edge rim, overly large text and basic ‘blob’ like leaves.

Kew gardens 50p value

The slightly gold colour of this coin reveals it to be a fake.

Spotting a fake: the pagoda

Fakes contain a number of giveaways when you look at the design of the pagoda on the tails side.

2009 Kew Gardens 50p Worth

At the top of the pagoda, an overly pointy roof can be a sign of a fake – refer back to the genuine Kew Gardens 50p above to compare.

At the base of the pagoda, there shouldn’t usually be any lines around the word ‘Kew’ - although a few real coins still carry these lines.

Kew Gardens London

Spotting a fake: the Queen

Start with the Queen’s neckline.

A genuine Kew Gardens 50p has the right base of the neck pointing towards the P in PENCE. Fakes sometimes get this wrong.

Kew Gardens 50p Coin

Then look at the designers’ initials, ‘the IRB’. If you see the word ‘COPY’ beside the initials, or if the IRB is too big, you are looking at a fake.

Kew Gardens 50p Value

If it turns out you have a fake, then remember it’s illegal to use it or sell it on; unfortunately, there’s very little you can do about fakes, which is why it’s so important to check coins first.