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Australia’s time-travelling $1 coins

Liam Saville
2 min readNov 3, 2018
Australian $1 coins marked with the letters A, U and S (Image: Royal Australian Mint)

I was at work yesterday, midway through reading a rather dull and laborious report when a loud, animated discussion between two colleagues in the hall outside my office caught my ear. It was more than the usual work banter; there was genuine excitement in their voices, so naturally, I did what anyone would do — I put the boring report aside and stuck my head out to see what was going on.

It turned out that one of them had noticed that a $1 coin he’d received in change from the café up the road was minted in 2019. Now, just in case you’re reading this post in the future, I’ll clarify, the date this happened was 2 November 2018.

Knowing that minting errors can make coins considerably more valuable than their face value, my colleagues were enthusiastically discussing how much this time travelling coin might be worth. Unfortunately for the coin’s owner, about two minutes and a couple of google searches later we found out — just $1.

You see, in celebration of the 35th anniversary of the Australian $1 coin, the Royal Australian Mint has just released three million specially marked $1 coins.

The coins, all of which have been dated 2019, and marked with the letters A, U, or S as well as a small 35 on the face were minted for the nation’s first national coin hunt. A competition that some Australian media outlets…

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Liam Saville
Liam Saville

Written by Liam Saville

A writer of words and a teller of tales — Liam Saville is a novelist, writer and blogger. www.liamsaville.com

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