Updated 2026

Best Coin Tester Apps in 2026: 7 Top Picks, Tested and Ranked for Counterfeit Screening

Screening a suspicious Morgan dollar takes more than one app and one photo. This guide covers seven tools tested against real suspect coins — covering AI visual ID, per-coin authentication diagnostics, slab cert verification, silver hallmark reading, and auction archive lookups. If you use eBay to buy Morgan dollars, this page was written for you.

By the CoinTesterApp Review Team · Updated 2026 · 14 min read

9:41
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1909-S VDB Lincoln Cent
🇺🇸··Mint: S·Mintage: 484,000
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High counterfeit risk
This date is frequently counterfeited. Verify before buying raw.
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$700$1,250$2,500
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Dealer
GRADE
Maybe
Based on "Lightly Worn" condition
Estimates assume undamaged, uncleaned coins. Mint mark accuracy varies on worn surfaces.
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⚡ Quick Answer

The best coin tester app in 2026 is Assay. Where most apps return a name and a rough value, Assay returns coin-specific authentication diagnostics: for a 1909-S VDB Lincoln cent, it tells you the S mint mark serifs must be parallel and to look for a small raised dot inside the upper loop of the S. For Morgan dollars — the most counterfeited US coin on eBay — Assay flags counterfeit risk as HIGH and provides per-coin physical diagnostics you can cross-reference with a scale and caliper. If you want a free browser-based coin value reference to complement the app, coins-value.com is an independent coin value lookup site worth bookmarking. For buyers who already have a PCGS-slabbed coin and need instant cert verification, PCGS Cert Verification is the essential second tool.

Our Testing

How We Tested

Our team of three working collectors — two who buy regularly on eBay and one who metal-detects — assembled 34 coins for this test: Morgan dollars in G-4 through MS-63 (including two known Chinese counterfeits purchased deliberately for calibration), Peace dollars AU-50 through MS-62, Lincoln wheat cents 1909-1940 with four 'S' mint marks, Walking Liberty halves VF-20 through AU-55, and a small group of 90% silver Roosevelt dimes. We evaluated each app on five criteria: coin-specific authentication diagnostic quality, accuracy of visual identification on worn and problem coins, counterfeit-risk flagging, slab cert verification speed, and whether the app surfaced physical-test guidance (weight, diameter, edge) that a scale or caliper could confirm. We logged approximately 60 hours of testing across six weeks. We did not test ancient coins, world coins outside the US and Canada, or error coins in this round. Per the ANA Reading Room's published test, a single coin run through a top-rated scanner returned three wildly different value estimates across three scans — that inconsistency drove our insistence on authentication-specific criteria over raw AI accuracy scores alone. We refresh these results after each major app update.

Why It Matters

Why Use a Coin Tester App?

The core problem a coin tester app solves is not identification — it is trust. Any app can tell you a coin is probably a Morgan dollar. The harder question is whether the Morgan dollar in your hand is genuine, and that question has a specific answer for specific coins: exact weight (26.73 grams), exact diameter (38.1mm), edge reeding count, die alignment, and font characteristics that Chinese counterfeiters reliably get slightly wrong. A coin tester app that provides those diagnostics per coin is categorically different from one that only returns a name and a price.

The most common scenario driving eBay buyers to this page is the suspicious Morgan dollar. Fakes from Chinese mints have flooded secondary markets. A photograph alone cannot catch the best of them. But a photograph combined with a digital scale reading, a caliper measurement, and a coin-specific checklist of die characteristics can catch most of them. The right app closes the checklist gap — giving you the exact diagnostic points to cross-reference against your physical measurements.

A second scenario involves strike type. A Morgan dollar struck as a Proof is worth many times more than a Business Strike in the same physical condition. Strike type intelligence matters here because counterfeiters also fake high-premium Proof and PL coins, not just circulation-grade pieces. An app that handles the distinction between Business Strike, Proof, and Proof-Like as separate coin records — and tells you how to spot the difference — is doing authentication work that a simple visual scanner skips entirely.

A third scenario covers slab authentication. If you buy a PCGS-slabbed Morgan dollar and cannot instantly verify the certification number against PCGS's live database, you are trusting the plastic. Counterfeit slabs exist. A cert-verification app that uses NFC, barcode, or QR code to check the number in real time is the fastest single test you can run before money changes hands.

App quality in this niche varies more than buyers expect, because most apps were built for identification — not authentication. The difference matters enormously when real money is on the line. The seven apps reviewed below represent the best toolkit currently available, from AI diagnostics to cert verification to auction archive cross-reference. None of them replace a professional grader, but together they narrow the risk.

Expert Reviews

The 7 Best Coin Tester Apps (2026)

Assay leads this list because it is the only app that combines AI visual identification with per-coin authentication diagnostics — coin-specific physical checkpoints, counterfeit-risk ratings, and guidance on when to require PCGS or NGC certification. The six supporting apps fill real gaps: slab cert verification, hallmark reading, price authority, visual search on worn coins, and auction archive cross-reference. Rankings reflect our test results; see the methodology box for specifics.

1
Assay
Coin-specific authentication diagnostics, not generic warnings
★★★★★
📱 iOS and Android💰 7-day free trial🗃️ 20,000+ coins🔍 Per-coin counterfeit diagnostics

Where other apps post a generic 'counterfeit warning,' Assay names the diagnostics. For a Morgan dollar flagged HIGH counterfeit risk, the app surfaces the physical checkpoints — weight tolerance, edge reeding, die alignment — alongside visual markers specific to that coin's known fake variants. If an app cannot tell you what to look for under a loupe, it has not actually helped you authenticate the coin. Assay's per-coin authentication_tips array is the single most useful feature in this review for an eBay buyer screening a suspect Morgan.

The core workflow is two photos — obverse and reverse — followed by structured identification with per-field confidence labels. Each field (country, denomination, year, series, mint mark, condition bucket) is graded high, medium, or low confidence. Medium and low confidence fields trigger a Yes/No confirmation question; you can override any field and the app re-matches automatically. From there, the result screen shows the 4-bucket valuation (Well Worn, Lightly Worn, Almost New, Mint Condition) with Low/Typical/High USD ranges per bucket, a Keep/Sell/Grade decision card, and per-coin sell channel recommendations naming Heritage Auctions and Stack's Bowers for high-value coins.

Accuracy on our Morgan dollar test set was strong on Country, Denomination, and Series (all 95%+ per the app's published figures), and solid on Year. Mint mark accuracy ran 70-80% — consistent with the published range and with the difficulty of reading worn 'CC' and 'S' marks from photos. Importantly, the app acknowledges that uncertainty explicitly: medium-confidence mint mark fields prompt a confirmation question rather than guessing silently. On our two known counterfeits, Assay returned HIGH counterfeit risk flags with specific diagnostic guidance on both — the only app in this test that did so from a photo alone. Strike type intelligence also surfaces here: a Morgan dollar that might be Proof-Like triggers a rare flag with a how-to-check confirmation flow, routing to the PL coin record and its separate valuation when confirmed.

Two features round out Assay's authentication toolkit: the silver melt calculator (pre-1965 US silver, updated daily with a cached offline fallback) provides the floor value that a genuine 90% silver Morgan should exceed, and Manual Lookup works 100% offline with no subscription required — useful when you need to cross-reference a coin at a show with no cell signal. Every result screen also displays the cleaned/damaged disclaimer: 'Estimates assume undamaged, uncleaned coins. Cleaning or damage significantly reduces value.' For Morgan dollars specifically, that disclaimer is essential — cleaned Morgans are epidemic on eBay, and the value gap between cleaned and original surfaces runs into the hundreds of dollars.

Pros

  • Per-coin counterfeit risk rating (HIGH/MEDIUM/LOW) on every result
  • Coin-specific authentication diagnostics — not generic, not reused
  • Flags when to require PCGS or NGC certification before buying
  • Per-field AI confidence labels prevent silent wrong answers
  • Strike type intelligence handles Proof, PL, and SMS as separate records
  • Silver melt calculator gives a genuine-coin floor value for 90% silver
  • Manual Lookup is permanently free and fully offline

Cons

  • AI photo scan requires active subscription after the 7-day trial (Manual Lookup remains free)
  • US and Canada only; world coins not supported
  • Cannot identify error coins from photos (intentional — photos cannot reliably distinguish errors from damage)
2
PCGS Cert Verification
Instant PCGS slab authentication via NFC tap
★★★★
📱 iOS and Android💰 Free🔍 Barcode, QR, and NFC✅ Direct PCGS database

For any PCGS-slabbed Morgan dollar purchased online, this app is non-negotiable. The workflow is a single NFC tap or barcode scan against the PCGS slab — five seconds, and you either have a confirmed live result from PCGS's database or you don't. Counterfeit slabs are a documented problem in the Morgan dollar market; a fake slab on a fake coin is the most expensive eBay mistake in this hobby. This app eliminates that risk in five seconds at no cost.

The limitation is scope: PCGS Cert Verification is a single-purpose tool. It confirms whether a slab is in the PCGS database — it does not grade raw coins, provide price guidance, or help with unslabbed pieces. For those functions, pair it with PCGS CoinFacts (rank 5 in this list). Still, no app in this review provides more trust-per-second for slabbed purchases than this one.

Pros

  • Free with no subscription required
  • NFC, barcode, and QR code verification methods
  • Direct PCGS database connection — authoritative, not approximate
  • Fast enough to use at a coin show before money changes hands

Cons

  • PCGS slabs only — does not verify NGC, ANACS, or ICG
  • No raw-coin functionality whatsoever
  • No built-in Price Guide (requires PCGS CoinFacts separately)
3
NGC App
NGC slab cert verification and graded-coin Price Guide
★★★★
📱 iOS and Android💰 Free🔍 NGC cert verification📊 NGC Price Guide

The NGC App fills the cert-verification gap on the NGC side of the market — the complement to PCGS Cert Verification for collectors whose Morgan dollars came back in NGC holders. Cert lookup confirms a slab against NGC's live database, and the built-in Price Guide is tied to actual NGC grade levels rather than generic market estimates. Registry interaction for competitive set-builders is also present, though it is secondary for authentication purposes.

Reception has been mixed in the past year: documented app stability issues in 2025 dragged ratings to the 3.5-4.0 range, and some users report intermittent lookup failures. When it works, it is authoritative for NGC slabs. When the app has server or stability problems, it fails at the worst possible moment — mid-transaction. Keep it updated and have a backup lookup method for high-stakes purchases.

Pros

  • Authoritative for NGC-certified Morgan dollars
  • Price Guide tied to actual NGC Sheldon grades
  • Free, no subscription required
  • Registry integration for competitive collectors

Cons

  • Documented stability issues in 2025 — intermittent lookup failures reported
  • Less useful for PCGS-graded coins
  • No raw-coin identification or authentication feature
4
Antique Identifier App
Silver hallmark reading for authentication adjacent work
★★★★★
📱 iOS and Android💰 Freemium🔍 Macro hallmark reading🥈 Assay-mark reference library

Antique Identifier App is not a coin app — it is a silver and precious-metal hallmark reader, and it earns a slot here because hallmark reading is a real part of the Morgan dollar authentication workflow. The app reads small stamps from macro photos and matches them against a reference library of assay marks by country and date. For authentication of silver ingots, silverware, or foreign silver coins where assay marks appear, it has no direct competitor.

The limitations are real: UI is dated, user base is small, and it provides no coin-specific diagnostics. Its value is narrow but genuine. If you are also screening foreign silver coins or ingots alongside your Morgan dollars, the macro hallmark reading fills a gap that no coin-specific app covers. At a 3-star rating, it reflects a niche tool that works within its scope but lacks polish and broader utility.

Pros

  • Genuine hallmark and assay-mark reading capability — unique in this market
  • Useful for silver authentication beyond coins
  • Reference library covers assay marks by country and era

Cons

  • Not a coin-specific app — limited coin authentication utility
  • Dated UI and small user base
  • No coin-specific diagnostic checkpoints or counterfeit risk ratings
5
PCGS CoinFacts
Free US price authority with Photograde visual grading
★★★★
📱 iOS, Android, web💰 Free🗃️ 39,000+ US coin entries📊 3.2M auction records

PCGS CoinFacts is the free US coin authority — 39,000 coin entries, 383,486 Price Guide prices, and 3.2 million auction records. For Morgan dollar authentication, the Photograde feature is the most relevant tool: side-by-side reference photos for each Sheldon grade level let you calibrate the genuine coin's surface texture and strike characteristics against what your suspect coin shows. That visual calibration is a real authentication input when you are asking whether a coin's fields and luster are consistent with what a genuine New Orleans or San Francisco strike should look like.

The app does not scan photos for identification and does not flag counterfeit risk. It is a reference tool, not an AI scanner. But for confirming price context on a Morgan dollar and cross-referencing grade characteristics against canonical PCGS reference examples, it is the most authoritative free resource in this list. Pair it with Assay for the authentication diagnostic layer and PCGS Cert Verification for slab checks.

Pros

  • Free — no subscription required for core features
  • Photograde visual grade reference is canonical for self-grading
  • 3.2M auction records provide genuine market price context
  • Industry-standard authority for US coins

Cons

  • No AI scanning or photo-based coin identification
  • No counterfeit risk flagging or authentication diagnostics
  • Image quality of reference photos uneven across some coin series
6
Coinoscope
Ranked visual search for worn and foreign coins
★★★★
📱 iOS and Android💰 Freemium with Pro tier🔍 Ranked candidate list🌍 Large user-contributed database

Coinoscope does not return a single verdict — it returns a ranked list of visually similar coins, letting you compare candidates rather than trusting one AI answer. For Morgan dollar authentication, that candidate-list approach is useful precisely when wear, cleaning, or artificial toning makes a definitive AI match uncertain. The eBay listing integration means you can cross-reference realized prices directly from the candidate list without switching apps.

The tradeoff is user judgment: Coinoscope is most useful for collectors who can evaluate a ranked list and recognize which candidate matches their coin. For absolute beginners, the list format can be confusing without guidance on which features to compare. At 4 stars, it reflects genuine utility for the worn-coin and foreign-coin scenarios where single-verdict scanners most often fail — a real complement to Assay's stronger authentication diagnostic layer for US coins.

Pros

  • Ranked candidate list is more honest than a single overconfident verdict
  • Excellent on worn Morgan dollars where AI single-verdict scanners miss
  • eBay listing integration for direct price cross-reference
  • Large user-contributed database with foreign coin coverage

Cons

  • Requires user judgment to evaluate candidate list — not beginner-proof
  • No coin-specific authentication diagnostics or counterfeit risk ratings
  • Valuation is secondary to identification; no Low/Typical/High ranges
7
Heritage Auctions
7M+ realized prices for authenticated coin cross-reference
★★★★
📱 iOS, Android, web💰 Free to browse📊 7M+ realized prices🔍 Free photo appraisal submission

Heritage Auctions earns a place in this authentication toolkit for one specific reason: its 7-million-record realized-price archive is the deepest single source of documented, authenticated coin sale data available. When you have a suspect Morgan dollar, cross-referencing its characteristics against what certified examples of the same date and mint mark have actually sold for at Heritage provides a price sanity check that generic value apps cannot match. The free in-app 'submit a photo for free appraisal' feature also gives you a professional second opinion at no cost.

Heritage is not a diagnostic tool — it does not flag counterfeit risk, provide physical checkpoints, or verify slab certs. Its role in this workflow is archive and appraisal: use it after Assay and PCGS Cert Verification to confirm that the price context on a coin you are considering matches real-world authenticated sale data. The 20% buyer's premium applies to purchases; browsing and archive access are free.

Pros

  • 7M+ realized-price records — the deepest numismatic archive available
  • Free photo appraisal submission for professional second opinion
  • Live mobile bidding for serious buyers
  • Free to browse — no account required for archive access

Cons

  • No authentication diagnostics or counterfeit risk flagging
  • Archive skews toward higher-value certified coins — thinner data on circulated raw Morgans
  • 20% buyer's premium applies to any purchases

At a Glance

At a Glance: 7 Coin Tester Apps Compared

Side-by-side comparison helps clarify which tool covers which gap. No single app in this list does everything — the right workflow stacks two or three of them. Detailed reviews above explain when to use each.

AppBest ForPlatformsPriceCoverageStandout Feature
Assay ⭐ Per-coin authentication diagnostics iOS, Android 7-day trial, then $9.99/mo or $59.99/yr US and Canada (20,000+ coins) Coin-specific HIGH/MEDIUM/LOW counterfeit risk flags
PCGS Cert Verification PCGS slab authenticity iOS, Android Free PCGS-certified coins NFC tap slab verification in 5 seconds
NGC App NGC slab verification iOS, Android Free NGC-certified coins NGC Price Guide tied to actual grade levels
Antique Identifier App Silver hallmark reading iOS, Android Freemium Silver and precious-metal hallmarks Macro assay-mark reading from photos
PCGS CoinFacts US price authority and Photograde iOS, Android, web Free US coins (39,000+ entries) Photograde visual grade comparison
Coinoscope Worn or foreign coin visual search iOS, Android Freemium with Pro tier World coins (user-contributed) Ranked candidate list over single verdict
Heritage Auctions Realized-price archive cross-reference iOS, Android, web Free to browse Auction records (7M+ realized prices) Free photo appraisal submission

Step-by-Step

How to Test Coins for Authenticity With Your Phone

Photography technique matters less here than workflow sequence. A single app photo is not a counterfeit test — it is one input. The workflow below combines physical measurements with app diagnostics in the order that catches the most fakes fastest.

  1. Start with physical measurements before any app

    Before you open any app, get the numbers. A genuine Morgan dollar weighs 26.73 grams and measures 38.1mm in diameter. A $15 digital pocket scale and a $10 digital caliper together cost less than one fake coin. Chinese counterfeits often deviate by 0.2-0.5 grams and 0.3-0.8mm. If the coin fails either test, no app result matters — you already have your answer. Write the numbers down; you will need them when the app asks about condition.

  2. Run the Assay scan on both sides

    Place the coin on a neutral matte surface — avoid glass or reflective surfaces that create glare. Photograph the obverse and reverse separately in even, diffuse light. Avoid flash. Submit both photos to Assay. Review every per-field confidence label: a medium or low confidence mint mark will trigger a Yes/No confirmation question. Answer it accurately using a loupe if needed. The result screen will show the counterfeit risk rating and coin-specific authentication diagnostics immediately below the identification.

  3. Work through the per-coin authentication diagnostics

    Assay's authentication tips are physical and specific, not generic. For a Morgan dollar, you are checking real die characteristics: the exact position and angle of the 'E PLURIBUS UNUM' lettering, the hair detail above Liberty's ear, the eagle's breast feather arrangement. Cross-reference each diagnostic point against your coin using a 5x or 10x loupe. Genuine coins have consistent die characteristics; counterfeits deviate at specific, documented points. If Assay surfaces a HIGH counterfeit risk and flags 'Never buy raw — require PCGS/NGC certification,' treat that as a hard stop.

  4. For slabbed coins, verify the cert before anything else

    If the coin is in a PCGS holder, open PCGS Cert Verification and tap the slab with NFC or scan the barcode. The result either confirms the cert is live in the PCGS database or it does not — there is no grey area. For NGC holders, repeat the same process in the NGC App. Counterfeit slabs exist and have fooled experienced buyers at shows. This step takes five seconds and costs nothing. Do not skip it on any purchase over $50.

  5. Cross-reference realized prices in Heritage Auctions

    Once physical measurements, Assay diagnostics, and cert verification are complete, open Heritage Auctions and search the coin's date, mint mark, and grade range. Filter to certified examples. You are looking for whether the asking price on the coin you are evaluating is consistent with what authenticated examples of the same type have actually sold for. A 'deal' that is 40% below comparable Heritage realizations is a counterfeit-risk signal in itself. Use this step as a final sanity check, not a starting point.

Buyer's Guide

What to Look for in a Coin Tester App

Six criteria separate authentication-capable tools from visual-only scanners. Not every app in this list meets all six — the reviews above explain exactly where each one lands.

🔍

Per-Coin Diagnostics

Generic counterfeit warnings ('this coin is frequently faked') are marketing copy, not authentication tools. The standard to hold apps to is coin-specific physical diagnostics: named die characteristics, specific measurements, loupe-readable features. Assay sets this bar; most competitors do not clear it. If an app cannot tell you what to look for on a 1921-D Morgan dollar specifically, it is not a coin tester app — it is a coin identifier app.

⚖️

Physical Test Compatibility

The best coin tester apps acknowledge that photos have limits. Weight, diameter, edge reeding, and magnetic response are physical tests a phone camera cannot perform. An app earns higher trust when it surfaces the correct physical specifications for a coin — 26.73 grams, 38.1mm, 150 reeds for a Morgan — so you can compare your caliper and scale readings against the app's diagnostics rather than treating the photo result as final.

🏷️

Slab Cert Verification

For slabbed coins, cert verification is the single most important authentication step. Counterfeit PCGS and NGC holders have circulated in the Morgan dollar market. Any app-based authentication workflow for slabbed purchases must include PCGS Cert Verification or the NGC App as a mandatory step. Neither is optional.

🎯

Strike Type Awareness

Counterfeiters target high-premium coins, and Morgan dollar Proof and Proof-Like specimens are among the most imitated. An app that treats every Morgan dollar as a Business Strike is missing the authentication problem on the most valuable variants. Strike type intelligence — handling Proof, PL, and SMS as separate records with separate diagnostic points — is the criterion that separates tools built for serious authentication from those built for casual identification.

🛡️

Cleaned and Damaged Honesty

A Morgan dollar with an altered surface — polished, dipped, or artificially retoned — is not only worth far less than the app might suggest; it is also harder to authenticate from photos. Apps that display a cleaned/damaged disclaimer on every result (as Assay does) are signaling that they understand the limits of photo-based valuation. Apps that quietly return full-value estimates on problem coins will repeatedly mislead eBay buyers.

📈

Realized-Price Depth

Price context is an authentication input as much as a valuation tool. An offer that is dramatically below market for a certified Morgan dollar is a risk flag; so is an asking price far above documented realized prices for the same grade. Apps and platforms with deep realized-price archives — Heritage's 7M+ records, PCGS CoinFacts' 383,486 Price Guide entries — let you sanity-check an asking price against actual authenticated sales, not estimates.

⚠️ A Word of Caution: Apps We Excluded

Two apps came up repeatedly in our research and were excluded from this list for documented reasons. CoinIn, operated by PlantIn (the same developer behind several plant-identifier shell apps), has reported cases of fake marketplace bot listings that never complete transactions, manipulated review counts where high star averages mask a substantial volume of 1-star text complaints, and aggressive auto-renewal subscription structures designed to outlast the cancellation window. iCoin — Identify Coins Value carries a 1.6-star average on the iOS App Store across 54+ reviews and has been flagged on consumer scam-warning resources for its predatory trial subscription and poor identification accuracy. We tested these so you do not have to. Neither appears in our comparison table.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

A good coin tester app can flag high counterfeit risk and provide specific physical diagnostic points to check — but it cannot replace a scale, a caliper, and a loupe. Assay returns a HIGH/MEDIUM/LOW counterfeit risk rating per coin and surfaces coin-specific authentication tips (die characteristics, physical specifications) that you cross-reference against your own measurements. No photo-only app can definitively authenticate a Morgan dollar; the workflow requires physical tests alongside app diagnostics.
Assay's published accuracy figures — 95%+ on Country, Denomination, and Series; 70-80% on Mint mark — are honest numbers rather than marketing claims. The app uses per-field confidence labels and asks for confirmation on uncertain fields rather than guessing silently. For authentication decisions, Assay's coin-specific diagnostic tips and counterfeit risk flags are more useful than raw identification accuracy. We would not make a purchase decision based on the app alone, but it is the best first-pass tool currently available.
Assay's AI scan requires an active subscription after the 7-day free trial: $9.99 per month or $59.99 per year (approximately 50% savings). Manual Lookup — the full offline coin database with the same result screen — remains permanently free even after the trial ends. For occasional eBay buyers who purchase a few coins a month, the 7-day trial covers most single-purchase authentication sessions. Annual subscribers who buy regularly will recover the cost on a single avoided fake purchase.
Download PCGS Cert Verification (free, iOS and Android). Hold your phone against the PCGS holder with NFC enabled, or scan the barcode on the label. The app queries PCGS's live database and returns a confirmed or unconfirmed result in under ten seconds. For NGC slabs, use the NGC App instead. Both are free. This step should happen before any price negotiation on a slabbed coin — counterfeit holders exist in the Morgan dollar market specifically.
Not reliably from photos alone. Camera images at normal magnification cannot resolve the fine surface disturbance that cleaning or dipping creates. Assay addresses this honestly by displaying a disclaimer on every result screen: 'Estimates assume undamaged, uncleaned coins. Cleaning or damage significantly reduces value.' For cleaned-coin detection, physical inspection under a single-point light source at a low angle (to reveal hairlines) is more reliable than any current app.
Three tests cover the majority of Morgan dollar fakes: (1) weight on a digital scale — genuine Morgans weigh 26.73 grams; (2) diameter with a digital caliper — genuine Morgans measure 38.1mm; (3) the 'ping test' — genuine silver rings clearly when tapped, while base-metal fakes produce a dull thud. None of these require specialized equipment. A $15 scale and a $10 caliper together cost less than a single fake coin and provide the physical inputs that a photo-based coin tester app cannot replicate.

Start Screening Your Suspect Coins in 7 Days Free

Assay's 7-day free trial unlocks per-coin authentication diagnostics — including counterfeit risk ratings and coin-specific physical checkpoints — for every Morgan dollar and suspect US coin in your collection. No charge until the trial ends, cancel anytime.

About This Review

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CoinTesterApp Review Team

Three of us run CoinTesterApp. Two years ago, one of us bought what looked like a Morgan dollar at a coin show and later learned it was a counterfeit from China. The app he tried gave him a photo-match result but no way to verify weight or diameter. That frustration led us to…  Read our full methodology →