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This is why your brand new £1 coin was actually made three years ago and has Queen Elizabeth II on it

Pound coins bearing the image of King Charles III

Millions of brand new £1 coins are about to enter tills across the UK but the will say 2022 and you won’t find King Charles on them. If that left you scratching your head or wondering if there’d been some kind of time slip, then I can provide the answer. Your brand new coin is actually three years old.

On August 20 2025, the Royal Mint released 29 million shiny £1 coins into circulation. All of them bear the image of Queen Elizabeth II and the date of 2022. And that’s because they were actually struck three years ago when the longest reigning Monarch in British history was celebrating her Platinum Jubilee. The Mint always has to be ready to keen the money in the country flowing. It releases new coins when enough old versions of that denomination have been lost due to wear and tear or, well, just lost.

The last £1 coin featuring the image of Queen Elizabeth II
The last £1 coin bearing Elizabeth II is now in circulation (Royal Mint)

And that means that sometimes, there’s a wait on when the appear. This is one such case. On the same day that the millions of Queen Elizabeth II coins were put into circulation, several million bearing the image of her son and successor, King Charles III, also made their way to tills and banks around the UK. But only around 7 million of those were struck to make up the total number needed at this particular moment.

The King himself insisted at the start of his reign that new coins and notes bearing his image only appear once the old supply was exhausted. That was to save money and resources. However, it does mean that three years into his rule, we find ourselves in the rather strange situation of our brand new coins being three years old and having a different Monarch on them.

Pound coins bearing the image of King Charles III
Pound coins bearing the image of King Charles III are now in circulation for the first time (Royal Mint)

The new release of circulating pound coins can only come at a time when it’s economically sensible to release them. Even though there were almost thirty million £1 coins waiting to hit tills when Elizabeth II died, adding that amount of money to the economy just to clear the decks made no financial sense. Neither did melting them down and starting again.

And when I asked the Royal Mint why these ‘new’ coins said 2022, they replied that’s when they were made. This money has been waiting for the right moment to make its appearance and it comes three years after Elizabeth II headed to Balmoral to spend her last weeks in her beloved Scottish home.

The dual release also adds a rather historic and personal touch to the coinage. The Royal Mint says this is the rarest Queen Elizabeth II £1 coin ever minted because of the low numbers that have made it to the tills compared with other releases in her reign. But this is also the first time that a circulating £1 coin with King Charles on it has been made – mother and son united in history, one ore time.

Collectors will be keeping an eye out for both these rarities. It took me until this summer to find a bank note with King Charles on it and then I saw two in quick succession. I’ll keep them peeled for these two coins, including this rare event, money made in expectation of a long reign continuing but which remains useful several years after it is done.

About author

Lydia Starbuck is Editor in Chief at Royal Central and the main producer and presenter of the Royal Central Podcast and Royal Central Extra.Lydia is also a pen name of June Woolerton who is a journalist and writer with over twenty years experience in TV, radio, print and online. Her latest book, A History of British Royal Jubilees, is out now. Her new book, The Mysterious Death of Katherine Parr, will be published in March 2024.June is an award winning reporter, producer and editor. She's appeared on outlets including BBC 5 Live, BBC Radio Ulster and BBC Local Radio and has also helped set up a commercial radio station.June is also an accomplished writer with a wide range of material published online and in print. She is the author of two novels, published as e-books. She is also a marriage registrar and ceremony celebrant.