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'Always check both sides' as expert says this £2 coin is worth £1,000

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An expert has told Brits to “always check both sides” of a common coin in case it features a rare error. If your £2 coin features this specific mistake it could be worth as much as £1,000.

According to an expert known online as the Coin Collecting Wizard, you should always have a closer look at any £2 coins from 2014. If they feature an image of Lord Kitchener they could be particularly valuable.

In a post uploaded to social media platform TikTok, he explained more: “Do you know why this £2 coin is worth £1,000?" he said.

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“Most people have the Lord Kitchener £2 in their change - the one that says ‘your country needs you’ with Kitchener’s face on it. Millions were made, so normally it’s only worth £2. But there’s one version that can be worth up to a grand.”

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The Royal Mint produced 5,720,000 copies of these £2 coins, to mark 100 years since the outbreak of the First World War. But for it to be worth a lot of money the coin needs to feature a specific misprint - known as a “mule error”.

The expert continued: “Here’s why. It’s called a mule error. A mule happens when the wrong dies are used in production. On this coin some of them were struck without the usual words ‘two pounds’ on the obverse (the Queen’s side).

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“So if your coin is missing the ‘two pounds’ under the Queen’s portrait, you might just be holding one of the rarest £2 errors in circulation!” He added: “Always check both sides of your coins - sometimes the mistake makes it more valuable than the design itself.”

As reported by This is Money, an example of an error Lord Kitchener coin sold in 2024 for £1,000.

It was estimated the coin would fetch between £600 to £800. It was bought by an American bidder at a live auction.

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