DetectID
Practical guides·8 min read·Updated 18 May 2026

UK coin grading: Poor to Uncirculated, with hammered caveats

The UK adjectival grading scale (Poor → Fair → Fine → VF → EF → UNC) explained, with the hammered-specific rules that change how it's applied.

The grade of a coin drives its valuation by something like an order of magnitude. A Fine Elizabeth I sixpence is worth roughly £30 at retail; an Extremely Fine example is worth ten times that or more. Knowing how the UK adjectival grading scale works — and the specific rules for hammered coins — turns a guess into a defensible estimate.

Fair
Outline only. Hair, beard texture, eye detail all worn flat. Legend essentially gone.
Very Good
Bust outline clear, some hint of internal detail. Crown beads survive as faint marks. Most legend readable.
Fine
~50% of original detail surviving. Hair locks visible, beard texture present, full legend readable. A respectable detector find.
Very Fine
Wear only on the highest points. Hair strands sharp, crown jewels distinct. Rare from a field find.

The UK adjectival scale

Spink, Noonans and Baldwin’s all use the same nine-level scale, with two extensions at the top end:

GradeAbbr.What it means
PoorPBarely identifiable. Type and ruler may be unrecognisable.
FairFrHeavily worn. Type recognisable but most legend gone.
About GoodAGSome legend visible. Most detail flat.
GoodGHeavy wear, but main design clear and some legend readable. High points smooth.
Very GoodVGConsiderable wear. Legend mostly readable. Partial bust detail.
FineFClear design. Considerable wear on high points. ~50% of original detail. Typical PAS find at this grade or below.
Very FineVFMinor wear on high points. Full legend. ~75% original detail.
Extremely FineEF / XFSlight wear on highest points only. Near-full detail, sharp lettering.
About UncirculatedAUSlightest trace of wear. Full bloom on some areas.
UncirculatedUNCNo wear. Full mint state. Extremely rare for hammered.
Brilliant UncirculatedBUUNC with mint lustre intact.
Fleur de CoinFDCPerfect. Effectively unknown for hammered.

The detectorist’s working range

Most UK hammered detector finds grade between Fair and Fine. A Very Fine hammered coin from a field find is unusual. Extremely Fine and above are exceptional, often coming from hoards or very lightly buried single finds.

  • Fair to About Good: type identifiable, ruler often attributable on stylistic grounds even if the legend is gone. Most common range for plough-damaged coins.
  • Good to Very Good: the bulk of detector finds. Legend partially readable, main design clear, sub-class often attributable.
  • Fine: a good detector find. Full legend usually readable, ~50% of fine detail surviving.
  • Very Fine and up: keepers. Worth photographing properly and considering for proper auction valuation.

How to grade a coin in five steps

  1. Look at the high points. Hair, beard, crown, shield bosses, lettering tops. These are the first features to wear. The amount of flattening on the high points sets the rough ceiling.
  2. Read the legend.Fully readable → VF or better. Partially readable → F to VF. Mostly gone → VG or below.
  3. Check the bust detail.Hair strands visible → EF or better. Bust outline only, no internal detail → VG.
  4. Look at the fields.Smooth fields with light patina → higher grade. Pitting, peck marks, deep corrosion → lower grade or condition note.
  5. Note damage separately. Clipping, piercing, gouging, modern cleaning are condition issues, not grade modifiers. A clipped coin can still be VF on the surviving portion; mention the clipping in addition to the grade.

The hammered-specific rules

Hammered coinage is graded differently to milled because hammered coins were never uniform to begin with. A few rules of thumb:

  • Grade on what’s there, not what’s missing. Off-flan striking and weak strikes are normal — they don’t reduce grade unless the wear pattern itself is the issue. A weakly-struck-but-unworn coin is still EF.
  • Irregular flans are not damage. Hammered flans were cut from sheet by hand; perfectly round shapes are the exception. An irregular outline is normal.
  • Clipping is separate from grade.Mark it explicitly: “Charles I shilling, F, clipped”.
  • Strike faults(double-strikes, peck-marks, edge cracks) are noted but rarely downgrade. They’re part of the original product.
  • Patina is a positiveon hammered silver. An even dark grey or blue-grey tone is typical of long burial and generally desirable. Don’t scrub it off.

What each grade actually looks like

Poor and Fair

The legend is essentially gone. You might just identify the ruler from a surviving letter or two and the overall bust style. The portrait is reduced to an outline. The reverse design is recognisable as one of the standard patterns but the angles and details are flat. Most attribution depends on module and reverse family at this grade.

About Good and Good

Roughly half the legend survives. The bust is clearly identifiable but smooth on the highest points (forehead, crown, beard tip). The reverse cross and pellets are clear; for shielded reverses, the quarters are visible but their detail is blurred.

Very Good

Most of the legend is readable. The bust has internal detail beginning to show (hair, beard texture). The crown is clearly defined. The reverse has full pattern detail. This is a respectable detector find.

Fine

Full legend readable. Bust shows substantial internal detail. Crown and lace collar (where applicable) clearly defined. ~50% of original detail surviving. For a hammered detector find, this is a good day.

Very Fine

Light wear on the highest points only. Hair strands clearly visible. Sharp lettering. Full detail in the shield quarters. Rare from detector finds — usually only from very lightly buried single finds or freshly disturbed sites.

Extremely Fine

Wear visible only on the absolute highest points (the very tip of a beard, the top of a crown jewel). Otherwise as-struck. Exceptional from a detector find — usually hoard material.

Elizabeth I sixpence in high grade, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Elizabeth I sixpence at near-Extremely Fine — what 'all the detail still there' actually looks like. Hair strands distinct, full legend, sharp shield quarters. Compare this against any field-found hammered coin to calibrate your grading eye.Metropolitan Museum of Art (Open Access) · CC0 · source

Price progression

Auction records broadly show a 3x to 5x price progression between Fine, Very Fine and Extremely Fine for English hammered silver. A rough example for an Elizabeth I sixpence (typical date):

GradeIndicative retail price
Fair£10–20
Good£20–35
Very Good£35–60
Fine£60–100
Very Fine£200–350
Extremely Fine£700+

These are guideline figures, not commitments. Initial mark, date and provenance can shift them significantly — a rare initial mark in lower grade can be worth more than a common one in higher grade.

Try DetectID on a real find

Upload a photo, add anything you measured, and we’ll return a calibrated shortlist with period, denomination, ruler and reasoning chain — the same diagnostic logic the guide above is built on.

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