5 Yen Coin

 
5 Yen Coin Average ratng: 8,7/10 414 reviews
  1. 5 Yen Coin Meaning
  2. 5 Yen Coin To Usd
  3. Japanese 5 Yen Coin Value
  4. 5 Yen Coin In Japanese
  5. 5 Yen Coin Date
  6. 5 Yen Coin Size

These are real Japanese e yen coins from japan, Five-yen coins are commonly given as donations at Shinto shrines to establish a good connection with the deity of the shrine. The reason why the five yen coin is lucky is because it’s called a “go-EN” coin. The number 5 is “go” in Japanese, and “yen” is pronounced more like “en.” To be precise, “go-EN” means “honorably good luck” especially in terms of relationships. So people throw in these coins at a temple hoping to meet new people who.

Japan 5, 10, 20, 50 Sen and 1 Yen (Fakes are possible) 1873 to 1900

Early Japanese coins like this one are enjoying strong collector interest. This pattern, with the encircled dragon on the front and two-sided wreath and blossom on the back appears on the silver coins of denomination 5, 10, 20, and 50 Sen and 1 Yen. There are 100 sen in one yen. Copper and gold coins also carry the same pattern. This page addresses only silver coins. View our page on copper issues here.
The dates of these cois are from the Meiji Dynasty, which started in 1867. To find the date of your coin, use the listing of Japanese characters below and a web site such as AllCalendars.net. The coin in our picture comes from Meiji 30, or 1867 + 30 = 1897.
Catalog values for these coins are quite high, especially for coins in good condition. The coin in our picture is in average circulated condition. Gague your coin from this one, and apply the concepts on our Important Terminology page to convert catalog values to actual values. Remember, also, that these coins, especially the large ones, are often counterfeited, so be sure you trust the person involved in any transaction. If you think your coin may be valuable, find a knowledgable coin dealer or coin collector and get an opinion. CoinQuest and web sites like it are no match for an actual, first-person inspection of a coin. First-person inspection always gives better estimates of value than any price guide.
5 SEN
worn: $10 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $25
well preserved: $40
fully uncirculated: $75
coins dated 1876 are usually worth half these values
coins dated 1874 are worth about 5 times these values
coins dated 1880 are very rare and are worth $2000 or more


10 SEN
worn: $5 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $10
well preserved: $30
fully uncirculated: $65
coins dated 1873, 1895, 1896, and 1897 are usualy worth half these values
coins dated 1891 and 1892 are worth about 3 times these values

5 Yen Coin Meaning


coins dated 1880 are very rare and are worth $5000 or more
5 Yen Coin20 SEN
worn: $5 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $12
well preserved: $20
fully uncirculated: $50
coins dated 1873, 1874, 1875, 1891 and 1900 are worth about twice these values
coins dated 1888 are worth about 5 times these values
coins dated 1880 are very rare and are worth $1000 or more
50 SEN
worn: $15 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $30
well preserved: $80
fully uncirculated: $200
coins dated 1885 are worth about 5 times these values
coins dated 1874, 1875, 1876, and 1877 are worth at least $1000 even in worn condition
coins dated 1880 are very rare and are worth $2000 or more
1 YEN
worn: $75 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $120
well preserved: $225
5 Yen Coinfully uncirculated: $850
coins dated 1874, 1878, 1879 are worth at least $300 in worn condition, much more if in better condition
coins dated 1875 are very rare and are worth $4000 or more
The image above compares a valuable 1875 yen from world-reowned coin dealer Heritage Auctions to a crude copy. The details of the pattern vary greatly, but the most important give-away is the terrible surfaces of the fake and its mushy appearance. Counterfeits of valuable Chinese coins abound. Let the buyer beware.
Coin: 8776, Genre: The Sinosphere, Timeline: World
Created (yyyymm): 201108, Last review: 201508
Appearance: Normal round coin Metallic gray Letters: Latin Chinese style
Years: sort: 1873, filter: 1873 to 1900
Image: japan_10_sen_1897.jpg
Original inquiry: slight damage but otherwise well preserved. all letters are japanese and i do not understand japanese. only latin letters on coin say '10 sen'. slight wear on lettering. one side appears to have a dragon, though i can't tell. other side has a wreath much like the reverse if an indian head cent, and has a single cherry blossom above two japanese letters. dragon circle chrysanthemum dragon chrysanthemum wreath
Copyright 2009 to 2020 CoinQuest.com, all rights reserved.
Japan 5, 10, 20, 50 Sen and 1 Yen (Fakes are possible) 1873 to 1900

Early Japanese coins like this one are enjoying strong collector interest. This pattern, with the encircled dragon on the front and two-sided wreath and blossom on the back appears on the silver coins of denomination 5, 10, 20, and 50 Sen and 1 Yen. There are 100 sen in one yen. Copper and gold coins also carry the same pattern. This page addresses only silver coins. View our page on copper issues here.
The dates of these cois are from the Meiji Dynasty, which started in 1867. To find the date of your coin, use the listing of Japanese characters below and a web site such as AllCalendars.net. The coin in our picture comes from Meiji 30, or 1867 + 30 = 1897.
Catalog values for these coins are quite high, especially for coins in good condition. The coin in our picture is in average circulated condition. Gague your coin from this one, and apply the concepts on our Important Terminology page to convert catalog values to actual values. Remember, also, that these coins, especially the large ones, are often counterfeited, so be sure you trust the person involved in any transaction. If you think your coin may be valuable, find a knowledgable coin dealer or coin collector and get an opinion. CoinQuest and web sites like it are no match for an actual, first-person inspection of a coin. First-person inspection always gives better estimates of value than any price guide.
5 SEN
worn: $10 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $25
well preserved: $40
fully uncirculated: $75
coins dated 1876 are usually worth half these values
coins dated 1874 are worth about 5 times these values
coins dated 1880 are very rare and are worth $2000 or more


10 SEN
worn: $5 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $10
well preserved: $30
fully uncirculated: $65
coins dated 1873, 1895, 1896, and 1897 are usualy worth half these values
coins dated 1891 and 1892 are worth about 3 times these values
coins dated 1880 are very rare and are worth $5000 or more
20 SEN
worn: $5 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $12
well preserved: $20
fully uncirculated: $50
coins dated 1873, 1874, 1875, 1891 and 1900 are worth about twice these values
coins dated 1888 are worth about 5 times these values
coins dated 1880 are very rare and are worth $1000 or more
50 SEN
worn: $15 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $30
well preserved: $80
fully uncirculated: $200
coins dated 1885 are worth about 5 times these values
coins dated 1874, 1875, 1876, and 1877 are worth at least $1000 even in worn condition

5 Yen Coin To Usd

coins dated 1880 are very rare and are worth $2000 or more
1 YEN
worn: $75 US dollars approximate catalog value
average circulated: $120

Japanese 5 Yen Coin Value


well preserved: $225
fully uncirculated: $850
coins dated 1874, 1878, 1879 are worth at least $300 in worn condition, much more if in better condition

5 Yen Coin In Japanese

coins dated 1875 are very rare and are worth $4000 or more

5 Yen Coin Date


The image above compares a valuable 1875 yen from world-reowned coin dealer Heritage Auctions to a crude copy. The details of the pattern vary greatly, but the most important give-away is the terrible surfaces of the fake and its mushy appearance. Counterfeits of valuable Chinese coins abound. Let the buyer beware.
Coin: 8776, Genre: The Sinosphere, Timeline: World
Created (yyyymm): 201108, Last review: 201508
Appearance: Normal round coin Metallic gray Letters: Latin Chinese style
Years: sort: 1873, filter: 1873 to 1900
Image: japan_10_sen_1897.jpg
Original inquiry: slight damage but otherwise well preserved. all letters are japanese and i do not understand japanese. only latin letters on coin say '10 sen'. slight wear on lettering. one side appears to have a dragon, though i can't tell. other side has a wreath much like the reverse if an indian head cent, and has a single cherry blossom above two japanese letters. dragon circle chrysanthemum dragon chrysanthemum wreath

5 Yen Coin Size

Copyright 2009 to 2020 CoinQuest.com, all rights reserved.