8 Rarest Coins In History That Can Make You Rich, Is There One in Your Collection Check It Out

1344 Edward III Gold Florin: Introduced by King Edward III in 1344 with a face value of 6 shillings. Featured a Royal Cross on the obverse and the King on his throne with leopards on the reverse.

1907 Gold Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle (High Relief): Designed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens, released in 1907 with a face value of $20. Less than 30 pieces produced due to high relief, with two housed in the Smithsonian museum.

1822 Half Eagle Gold Coin: U.S. Mint released with a $5 denomination, designed by John Reich. Approximately 17,800 made, only three believed to exist today, with two at the Smithsonian.

1913 Liberty Head Nickel: Initially issued in 1913 with a face value of 5 cents. Very limited production, with only five known to exist. One sold for $3.7 million in 2010, considered the most valuable non-precious metal coin.

1804 Silver Dollar: Minted in the 1830s during Edmund Roberts' diplomatic efforts. Only 15 coins believed to exist in total, separated into three classes. Class I division considered the most valuable, with one sold for $4.1 million in 1999.

2007 'Big Maple Leaf' 100kg Gold Coin: First coin with a face value of $1,000,000, produced by the Royal Canadian Mint. Six coins minted, featuring Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse and Maple leaves on the reverse.

1787 Brasher Gold Doubloon: Created by goldsmith Ephraim Brasher in response to the refusal by the State of New York legislature to mint new copper coins. 

1933 Double Eagle Gold Coin: Minted by the U.S. in 1933 but withdrawn from circulation later that year. Less than 15 pieces believed to remain, with one sold at auction for $7.59 million in 2002.