Gold Sovereign Mintages - Royal Mint 1817 - Today

GEORGE III : 1817 - 1820

G3

.

 

Sovereign

Half Sovereign

1817

3,235,239

2,080,197

1818

2,347,230

1,030,286

1819

3,574

None Issued

1820

2,101,994

35,043

.

Background:

George III was the King of Great Britain and the King of Ireland between 1760 and 1801, at which point the two nations formed a union. George officially ruled the union until his death on January 29th, 1820, but his son - also George - acted as Prince Regent from 1811 due to the King's failing mental health.

.

George III Sovereigns:

Sovereign coins were once a currency unit in England, and were reintroduced by the Royal Mint and the Treasury as part of the 1816 Great Recoinage. Britain was struggling with debt and a shortage of coins due to the ongoing Napoleonic Wars, which led to the creation of the Sovereign - a slightly lighter coin than the existing gold Guinea.

The gold Sovereign returned in 1817. Italian sculptor Benedetto Pistrucci designed the coin, creating the classic St George & Dragon design that is still used to this day. He also produced the portrait of King George, often referred to as the 'bull head George'. These coins had a notably thick border.

GEORGE IV : 1821 - 1830

G4

Laureate head: 1821 - 1825 | Bare head: 1825 - 1830

.

 

Sovereign

Half Sovereign

1821

9,405,114

231,288

1822

6,356,787

None Issued

1823

616,770

224,280

1824

3,767,904

591,538

1825

4,200,343 *

761,150

1826

5,724,046

334,830

1827

2,266,629

492,014

1828

386,182

1,224,754

1829

2,444,652

None Issued

1830

2,387,881

None Issued

*includes both obverse designs due to transition period

.

Background:

King George IV started his rule as the Prince Regent, deputising for his ill father. Following George III's death in 1820, George was crowned as his successor and the fourth of his name. The king was unpopular due to his lavish lifestyle and boisterous ways, with many labeling him irresponsible and unreliable.

.

George IV Sovereigns:

The thick border of the George III Sovereigns was abandoned, allowing for a larger portrait of the King. George also commissioned another redesign for the gold coins, wanting to move away from Pistrucci's St George design. In 1825, the Royal Mint began a transition period from the laureate (wreathed) head of George IV with St George, to a more modest bare head obverse with a shield back design on the reverse portraying the royal coat of arms.

WILLIAM IV : 1831 - 1837

W4

.

 

Sovereign

Half Sovereign

1831/32

598,547

None Issued

1833

1,225,269

None Issued

1834

None Issued

133,899

1835

723,441

722,554

1836

1,714,349

146,865 *

1837

1,172,984

160,207

* + additional rarities produced by the Royal Mint using the Sixpence die for the obverse side

.

Background:

William was the third son of George III, and succeeded his brother George IV in 1831. William was the third child of King George III and Queen Charlotte, as well as the third son. His older brother Frederick was a senior figure in the British Army and, unlike the eldest brother George, very well respected. Frederick died in 1827 to a swelling condition known as 'dropsy', and as such William became the heir to the throne.

.

William IV Sovereigns:

Akin to George IV before him, William IV had two different gold Sovereign coins issued during his reign. Both types kept with the 'Shield Back' design that George had introduced, but instead had slightly differing portraits of King William; one with a furtive look, and one more peaceful.

Collectors are keen on William's reign due to the unknown number of proof Sovereigns made during this period.

VICTORIA : 1838 - 1901

 VIC

'Shield Back' & Young head: 1838 - 1887 | Jubilee head: 1887 - 1893 | Old head: 1893 - 1901

.Queen Victoria reigned as Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from June 1837 until her death in January 1901. In 1876 she also became Empress of India. Until our present monarch, Victoria was the longest-reigning ruler in British history. Her lifespan led to the era being dubbed the Victorian Age, with massive industrial and social change occurring in the UK, all while Britain expanded its colonial ambitions across the world with the British Empire.

.

 

Sovereign

Half Sovereign

1838

2,718,694

273,341

1839

503,695

None Issued

1840

None Issued

None Issued

1841

124,054

508,835

1842

4,865,375

2,223,352

1843

5,981,968

1,251,762

1844

3,000,445

1,127,007

1845

3,800,845

887,526

1846

3,802,947

1,063,928

1847

4,667,126

928,636

1848

2,246,701

410,595

1849

1,755,399

845,112

1850

1,402,039

179,595

1851

4,013,624

773,575

1852

8,053,435

1,377,671

1853

10,597,993

2,708,796

1854

3,589,611

1,125,144

.

Sydney Sovereigns:

In 1854, due to the prevalence of gold in Australia, the Royal Mint opened up its first refinery outside of the British Isles. The site, in Sydney, would allow gold mining in Australia to save on transportation time and cost in getting the gold refined and coined. The Sydney refinery produced Sovereign coins until 1926.

.

 

Sovereign

Half Sovereign

Sovereign
(Sydney)

1855

8,448,482

1,120,362

502,000

1856

4,806,160

2,391,909

981,000

1857

4,495,748

728,223

499,000

1858

803,234

855,578

1,101,500

1859

1,547,603

2,203,813

1,050,500

1860

2,555,958

1,131,500

1,573,500

1861

7,624,736

1,130,867

1,626,000

1862

7,836,413

Mintage Unknown

2,477,500

1863

5,921,669

1,571,574

1,255,500

1864

8,656,353

1,758,490

2,698,500

1865

1,450,238

1,834,750

2,130,500

1866

4,047,288

2,058,776

2,911,000

1867

None Issued

992,795

2,370,000

1868

1,653,384

None Issued

2,319,000

1869

6,441,322

1,861,764

Mintage Unknown*

1870

2,189,960

981,408

1,220,000

1871

8,767,250

2,217,760

2,814,000

* Coins issued by the Sydney Mint in 1869 were dated 1868

Melbourne Sovereigns:

In 1872, thanks to the success of the Sydney Mint, the Royal Mint granted permission to another franchise refinery to open in Australia - this time in Melbourne. The site had originally bid against Sydney in 1854 to create the first refinery, but narrowly missed out. The Melbourne site would continue production until 1931.

 

 

Sovereign
(London)

Half Sovereign
(London)

Sovereign
(Sydney)

Half Sovereign
(Sydney)

Sovereign
(Melbourne)

Half Sovereign
(Melbourne)

1872

13,486,708

3,235,112

1,815,000

356,000

748,180

None Issued

1873

2,368,215

2,003,464

1,478,000

None Issued

752,199

165,034

1874

520,713

1,883,872

1,899,000

None Issued

1,373,298

None Issued

1875

None Issued

516,240

2,122,000

None Issued

1,888,405

None Issued

1876

3,318,866

2,785,187

1,613,000

None Issued

2,124,445

None Issued

1877

None Issued

2,197,482

1,590,000

None Issued

1,487,316

80,016

1878

1,091,275

2,081,941

1,259,000

None Issued

2,171,457

None Issued

1879

20,013

35,201

1,366,000

94,000

2,740,594

None Issued

1880

3,650,080

1,009,049

1,459,000

80,000

3,053,454

None Issued

1881

None Issued

None Issued

1,360,000

62,000

2,324,800

42,009

1882

None Issued

None Issued

1,298,000

52,000

4,559,631

107,522

1883

None Issued

2,807,411

1,108,000

220,000

2,050,450

None Issued

1884

1,769,635

1,121,600

1,595,000

None Issued

2,942,630

48,009

1885

717,723

4,533,605

1,486,000

None Issued

2,967,143

11,003

1886

None Issued

None Issued

1,667,000

82,000

2,902,131

38,008

. Jubilee head Victoria Sovereigns:

In 1887, the Royal Mint updated Queen Victoria's portrait on Sovereign coins to better reflect her age. After all, she was no longer a teenage monarch. The new design was released in time for Victoria's golden jubilee and production ran for seven years.

.

 

Sovereign
(London)

Half Sovereign
(London)

Sovereign
(Sydney)

Half Sovereign
(Sydney)

Sovereign
(Melbourne)

Half Sovereign
(Melbourne)

1887

1,111,280

841,200

2,002,000

134,000

2,856,424

64,013

1888

2,777,424

None Issued

2,187,000

None Issued

2,830,612

None Issued

1889

7,267,455

None Issued

3,262,000

64,000

2,732,590

None Issued

1890

6,529,887

2,243,200

2,808,000

None Issued

2,473,537

None Issued

1891

6,329,476

1,079,286

2,596,000

154,000

2,749,592

None Issued

1892

7,104,720

13,680,486

2,837,000

None Issued

3,488,750

None Issued

1893

None Issued

4,426,625

1,498,000

None Issued

1,649,352

110,024

. Old head Victoria Sovereigns:

The Royal Mint updated Sovereign coins once more during Queen Victoria's reign, in 1893. Her husband, Prince Albert, has passed away in 1861 from typhoid fever, though the Prince had been battling an unknown stomach condition for some years prior. In her grief, Victoria took to wearing only black, and a permanent veil to mark her mourning. She was significantly more reclusive during this period, and performed less public duties and appearances.

Eagle-eyed readers will notice that production of the Jubilee head and Old head overlapped in 1893. The Royal Mint (for the most part) alternated production between types and refinery sites.

.

 

Sovereign
(London)

Half Sovereign
(London)

Sovereign
(Sydney)

Half Sovereign
(Sydney)

Sovereign
(Melbourne)

Half Sovereign
(Melbourne)

1893

6,898,260

Mintage Unknown

1,346,000

250,000

1,346,000

Mintage Unknown

1894

3,782,611

3,794,591

3,067,000

None Issued

4,166,874

None Issued

1895

2,285,317

2,869,183

2,758,999

None Issued

4,165,869

None Issued

1896

3,334,065

2,946,605

2,544,000

None Issued

4,456,932

218,946

1897

None Issued

3,568,156

2,532,000

Mintage Unknown

5,130,565

None Issued

1898

4,361,347

2,868,527

2,548,000

None Issued

5,509,138

None Issued

.

Perth Sovereigns:

Just before Queen Victoria's death and the end of a record-long tenure as monarch, the Royal Mint opened one final refinery in Australia - this time in the far west. The Perth refinery was near many of Australia's largest gold fields - fields which are still mined today - and following Australia's independence from the British Empire, the refinery became the private Perth Mint; an LBMA-approved gold refiner from whom we stock gold and silver coins here at BullionByPost.

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Sovereign
(L)

Half
Sov (L)

Sovereign
(S)

Half
Sov (S)

Sovereign
(M)

Half
Sov (M)

Sovereign
(P)

Half
Sov (P)

1899

7,515,978

3,361,881

3,259,000

None Issued

5,579,157

97,221

690,992

None Issued

1900

10,846,741

4,307,372

3,586,000

260,000

4,305,904

112,920

1,886,089

119,376

1901

1,578,948

2,037,664

3,012,000

None Issued

3,987,701

None Issued

2,889,333

None Issued

.

EDWARD VII : 1902 - 1910

 ED7

.

 

Sovereign
(L)

Half
Sov (L)

Sovereign
(S)

Half
Sov (S)

Sovereign
(M)

Half
Sov (M)

Sovereign
(P)

Half
Sov (P)

1902

4,737,796

4,244,457

2,813,000

84,000

4,289,122

None Issued

4,289,122

None Issued

1903

8,888,627

2,522,057

2,806,000

231,000

3,521,780

None Issued

4,674,783

None Issued

1904

10,041,369

1,717,440

2,986,000

None Issued

3,743,897

None Issued

4,506,756

60,030

1905

5,910,403

3,023,993

2,778,000

None Issued

3,633,838

None Issued

4,876,193

None Issued

1906

10,466,981

4,245,437

2,792,000

308,000

3,657,853

82,042

4,829,817

None Issued

1907

18,458,663

4,233,421

2,539,999

None Issued

3,332,691

405,034

4,972,289

None Issued

.

Background:

Edward was the eldest son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. Due to Victoria's then-record reign as monarch, Edward set a new record for longest time as the Prince of Wales. Edward performed ceremonial tasks as a Prince, and was widely considered something of a playboy - a moniker which soured relations between him and his mother.

Following the death of Victoria, Edward was crowned King. His birth name was officially Albert, but he chose to use Edward so as not to devalue the name and accomplishments of his father.

.

Edward VII Sovereigns:

King Edward VII, as he was officially known, only had one variety of Sovereign coin modelled upon himself.

.

Canada Sovereigns:

In 1908, the Royal Mint's expansion continued - this time to Ottawa, Canada. The move was designed to help with debt-settlement between Britain and the US Treasury. Gold Sovereigns were shipped to Canada for smelting down and refining into ingots that the United States could use. The Royal Canadian Mint refinery opened, having been designed as an homage to Windsor Castle, but it also produced a small quantity of Sovereigns itself. The building still headquarters Canada's national mint to this day, though the company has a second, more modern refinery in Winnipeg.

.

 

Sovereign
(L)

Half
Sov (L)

Sovereign (S)

Half
Sov (S)

Sovereign
(M)

Half
Sov (M)

Sovereign (P)

Half
Sov (P)

Sovereign
(Canada)

1908

11,729,006

3,996,992

2,017,000

538,000

3,080,148

405,034

4,875,617

24,668

633

1909

12,157,099

4,010,715

2,057,000

None Issued

3,029,538

186,094

4,524,241

44,022

16,300

1910

22,379,624

5,023,881

2,135,000

474,000

3,054,547

None Issued

4,690,625

None Issued

28,020

.

GEORGE V : 1911 - 1932

G5

Standard head: 1911 - 1928 | Small head: 1929 - 1932

.Background:

George was the second son of Edward VII, and became heir to the throne following the death of his older brother, Prince Albert Victor. Albert was engaged to Princess Mary of Teck, but died following a flu pandemic. Instead, Princess Mary married the younger brother George, and they had six children.

During George V's reign, the outbreak of the First World War heavily impacted upon British society. Anti-German sentiment was high, leading King George to rename the royal house to become the House of Windsor, rather than the existing House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

.

 

Sov (L)

Half
Sov (L)

Sov (S)

Half
Sov (S)

Sov (M)

Half
Sov (M)

Sov (P)

Half
Sov (P)

Sov (C)

1911

30,044,105

6,104,106

2,519,000

252,000

2,851,451

None Issued

4,373,165

130,373

257,048

1912

30,317,921

6,224,316

2,227,000

278,000

2,469,257

None Issued

278,000

None Issued

None Issued

1913

24,539,672

6,094,290

2,249,000

None Issued

2,323,180

None Issued

4,635,287

None Issued

3,717

1914 *

11,501,117

7,251,124

1,774,000

322,000

2,012,029

None Issued

4,815,996

None Issued

14,900

1915

20,295,280

2,042,747

1,346,000

892,000

1,637,839

125,664

4,373,596

136,219

None Issued

1916

1,554,120

None Issued

1,242,000

448,000

1,272,634

None Issued

4,096,721

None Issued

6,119

1917

1,014,714

None Issued

1,666,000

None Issued

934,469

None Issued

4,110,286

None Issued

58,875

* Outbreak of the First World War | Suspension of the Gold Sovereign as circulated currency

.

India Sovereigns:

The Royal Mint expanded - albeit briefly - to Bombay (now Mumbai) in India as part of a push to increase output during the ongoing 'Great War'. The Indian refinery began production in August 1918 and ran until early 1919, with the conclusion of the First World War in November 1918 removing the need for a refinery in India.

.

 

Sov
(L)

Half
Sov (L)

Sov
(S)

Half
Sov (S)

Sov
(M)

Half
Sov (M)

Sov
(P)

Half
Sov (P)

Sov
(C)

Sov
(India)

1918

None Issued

None Issued

3,716,000

None Issued

4,809,493

None Issued

3,812,884

Mintage Unknown

106,570

1,294,372

.

Sovereign coins would now not be minted in London until 1925, while Half Sovereigns would not be issued again in Britain during George V's reign. Half Sovereign coins in general were not issued at any Royal Mint site until 1925, and production only lasted for two years.

A year after India stopped producing Sovereigns, the Ottawa refinery in Canada also ceased operation. The mint stayed active, however, and simply passed over to the Canadian authorities for domestic production.

.

 

Sovereign (Sydney)

Sovereign (Melbourne)

Sovereign (Perth)

Sovereign (Canada)

1919

1,835,000

514,257

2,995,216

135,957

.

 

Sovereign (Sydney)

Sovereign (Melbourne)

Sovereign (Perth)

1920

514,257

530,266

2,421,196

1921

839,000

240,121

2,314,360

1922

578,000

608,306

2,298,884

.

South Africa Sovereigns:

In 1923, the Royal Mint expanded to one last new location. This site was to be in South Africa, with a new refinery established in Pretoria. The mint would operate until 1932, at which point it was turned over to local authorities. It is now better known as the Rand Refinery, and produces Krugerrand coins for the South African government.

.

 

Sovereign
(London)

Sovereign
(Sydney)

Sovereign
(Melbourne)

Sovereign
(Perth)

Sovereign
(South Africa)

Half Sovereign
(South Africa)

1923

None Issued

416,000

511,129

2,124,154

406

None Issued

1924

None Issued

394,000

278,140

1,464,416

2,660

None Issued

1925

3,520,431

5,632,000

3,311,662

3,311,662

6,086,624

946,615

1926

None Issued

1,031,050

211,107

1,313,578

11,107,611

806,540

.

The 1925 issue of the Gold Sovereign was particularly special, as the coin die - used to stamp the pattern into the gold - was kept by the Royal Mint and used (arguably lazily) again in 1949, 1951 and 1952.

The Sydney mint ceased production in 1926, with South Africa taking the lead in terms of production quantities for the Royal Mint and the British Empire as a whole.

.

 

Sovereign (Melbourne)

Sovereign (Perth)

Sovereign (South Africa)

1927

310,156

1,383,544

16,379,704

1928

413,208

1,333,417

18,235,057

.

A slightly smaller headed Sovereign was issued for the final three years of coin production under George V, with the Royal Mint ceasing production between 1933 and 1936. During this time, production was halted in Melbourne and Perth, with Pretoria following shortly after.

.

 

Sovereign (Melbourne)

Sovereign (Perth)

Sovereign (South Africa)

1929

436,938

1,607,625

12,024,107

1930

77,588

1,915,352

10,027,756

1931

57,809

1,173,568

8,511,792

.

 

Sovereign (South Africa)

1932

1,066,680

.

GEORGE VI : 1937, 1949, 1951 - 1952

 G6

.

 

Sovereign (London)

1937

5,500*

1949

138,000**

1951

318,000**

1952

430,000 **

* Coins issued in 1937 were part of a four-coin Sovereign set
** 1925 re-strikes using the George V Sovereign die

.

Background:

George VI was born Albert Frederick Arthur George. He was the second son of George V and Mary of Teck. His older brother, Edward, was the heir to the throne but abdicated to marry Wallis Simpson; a divorcee who was in the process of her second divorce.

King George was a reluctant king, and a more introverted individual than previous monarchs. He famously admitted in his diary of speaking to his mother and breaking down in tears about the fact he was to become the monarch. His shy nature and severe stammer became the subject of the 2010 film 'The King's Speech'.

.

George VI Sovereigns:

Very few Sovereigns were issued during the reign of George VI, with even less of the Half Sovereign coins minted. Coins issued in 1937 were done so as part of a four-coin Sovereign set to commemorate George VI's coronation, while coins produced in 1949, 1951 and 1952 used the 1925 die. This means that the latest gold coins issued by the Royal Mint in George VI's reign actually depicted his father, George V.

.

ELIZABETH II : 1957 - Present

liz 5heads

Young head: 1957 - 1959, 1962 - 1968 | Decimal head: 1974, 1976, 1978 - 1984

Third head: 1985 - 1997 | Fourth head: 1998 - 2015 | Fifth head: 2016 - Present

.

Background:

Elizabeth II became Queen in 1952 following the death of her father, King George VI. Unsurprisingly, the young Queen chose to stick with her birth name as her regnal (ruling) name, but more surprising was the refusal to change the royal household from the House of Windsor to the House of Mountbatten or the House of Edinburgh - in keeping with the tradition of the wife taking the husband's family name.

Queen Elizabeth is the longest-serving British monarch, the longest serving female head of state in the world, and the oldest current monarch. The Royal Mint has issued five different heads for coins such as the Sovereign, with the latest issue by Jody Clark expected to be the last (bar any commemorative designs in the future).

.

Young head Elizabeth Sovereigns:

The first Sovereign coin to bear Elizabeth's face on the obverse came in 1957 - five years after her ascension to the throne and four after her coronation. The coin featured an appropriately young Elizabeth, and was designed by Mary Gillick.

.

 

Sovereign (London)

1957

2,072,000

1958

8,700,000

1959

1,385,228

1962

3,000,000

1963

7,400,000

1964

3,000,000

1965

3,800,000

1966

7,050,000

1967

5,000,000

1968

4,203,000

.

Decimal head Elizabeth Sovereigns:

Sovereign production ceased once more, with the approach of decimalisation. British currency switched from the old imperial system to metric on 'Decimal Day' - February 15th, 1971. The Royal Mint resumed production of Sovereigns and Half Sovereigns but with a new portrait of the Queen; a move designed to highlight the change in Britain's coinage, but also better reflect the Queen, who was now 17 years older than her previous portrait. This portrait was designed by Arnold Machin.

.

Royal Mint Llantrisant:

It was during this transitional decimalisation period that the Royal Mint drew up plans for expansion. The Tower mint in London had always been short of space. The move from the Tower of London to the Tower Hill site had been for expansion purposes, and once again the Mint needed to grow in order to handle the change in circulated and non-circulated coinage. A new site was chosen in South Wales in the small town of Llantrisant, and the first Sovereign coins were minted there in 1976.

.

 

Sovereign

Proof Sovereign

Half Sovereign

Proof Half Sovereign

1974

5,002,566

Mintage Unknown

None Issued

Mintage Unknown

1975

1 *

Mintage Unknown

None Issued

Mintage Unknown

1976

4,045,056

Mintage Unknown

None Issued

Mintage Unknown

1977

None Issued

Mintage Unknown

None Issued

Mintage Unknown

1978

6,555,000

Mintage Unknown

None Issued

Mintage Unknown

1979

9,100,000

50,000

None Issued

Mintage Unknown

1980

5,100,000

91,200

Mintage Unknown

76,700

1981

5,000,000

32,960

None Issued

Mintage Unknown

1982

2,950,000

22,950

2,500,000

19,090

1983

None Issued

21,250

None Issued

19,710**

1984

None Issued

19,975

None Issued

12,410

* One Sovereign coin was minted in 1975 as the final issue from the Tower Hill site in London before closure
** Includes Half Sovereigns in three or four-coin Sovereign sets

. Third head Elizabeth Sovereigns:

Between 1983 and 1997, Sovereign coins were only issued in proof format - regardless of the size of Sovereign. Proof mintages issued by the Royal Mint for this period account for coins included in coin sets.

A more mature portrait of the Queen was chosen by the Royal Mint for the Sovereign coins, as designed by artist Raphael Maklouf.

.

 

Proof Sovereign

Proof Half Sovereign

1985

17,242

9,951

1986

17,579

4,575

1987

22,479

8,187

1988

18,862

7,074

1989

23,471*

8,888

1990

8,425

4,231

1991

7,201

3,588

1992

6,904

3,783

1993

6,090

2,910

1994

7,165

5,000

1995

9,330

4,900

1996

9,110

5,730

1997

9,177

7,500

* Proof Sovereigns issued in 1989 marked the 500th anniversary of the original English Sovereign, and depicted
Queen Elizabeth II in the same portrait fashion as Elizabeth I on the obverse, with a large Tudor rose on the reverse.

.

Fourth head Elizabeth Sovereigns:

Perhaps the most recognisable portrait of Queen Elizabeth II was put into use in 1998 by the Royal Mint and the Royal household in general. Ian Rank-Broadley designed an older portrait of Elizabeth to more realistically portray her age, but also the significant position she held in British society as one of the longest ever reigning monarchs. The first two years of production continued to be proof-only, but in 2000 the Royal Mint decided to restart bullion Sovereign production.

.

 

Proof Sovereign

Proof Half Sovereign

1998

11,349

6,147

1999

11,903

7,500

.

 

Sovereign

Proof Sovereign

Half Sovereign

Proof Half Sovereign

2000

129,069

12,159

146,822

7,458

2001

49,462

15,000

94,763

4,596

2002 *

75,264

20,500

61,347

10,000

2003

43,230

16,220

47,818

4,868

2004

30,688

12,685

34,924

4,446

2005 +

45,542

15,458

30,299

5,011

2006

33,012

11,485

Mintage Unknown

4,173

2007

27,628

11,418

75,000

2,442

2008

58,894

10,872

75,000

2,465

2009 x

60,292

9,770

50,000

5,412

2010

243,158

8,828

250,000

5,370

2011

253,773

8,209

50,000

5,287

2012 #

432,925

8,158

250,000

2,303

2013

261,581

10,158

1,051 + 124 Brilliant Uncirculated (BU)

1,863

2014

261,216

7,500

9,900 BU

4,075

2015

113,177

9,800

5,000 BU

4,600

* Queen's Golden Jubilee, celebrating 50 years on the throne
+ A one-off design of Sovereign, as produced by Timothy Noad
x Proof figures from here onwards include coins in Sovereign collection sets
# A one-off design of Sovereign, as produced by Paul Day

.

Fifth head Elizabeth Sovereigns:

The fifth and likely final head of Elizabeth II was introduced in 2016 to all Royal Mint coins. Designed by Jody Clark (one of the Royal Mint's own design team), it was the first time in the Mint's long history that a staff member had been chosen to design a Sovereign coin. Clark has since gone on to design many of the Queen's Beast series, amongst other Royal Mint coins.

Please note: Due to the recent issuing of these coins, official Royal Mint figures on output are scarce. These figures will be updated as and when information becomes available.

.

 

Sovereign

Proof Sovereign

Half Sovereign

Proof Half Sovereign

2016

Mintage Unknown

7,500*

Mintage Unknown

3,675*

2017

Mintage Unknown

10,500

Mintage Unknown

5,150

2018

Mintage Unknown

Mintage Unknown

Mintage Unknown

Mintage Unknown

2019

Mintage Unknown

Mintage Unknown

Mintage Unknown

Mintage Unknown

* 2016 proof Sovereigns featured a unique obverse portrait to commemorate the Queen's 90th birthday, as designed by James Butler

.