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What You Didn’t Know About Coin Ridges

The Hidden History Behind Coin Ridges

Coins may seem simple, but their ridged edges hide a fascinating history. Next time you hold a quarter or dime, take a close look—it’s more than decoration.

Why Coins Have Ridges

In the past, coins were made of precious metals like gold and silver. They were literally worth their weight. Some people exploited this by “coin clipping,” shaving small amounts of metal from the edges. Over time, these tiny cuts added up, stealing significant amounts of precious metal.

To prevent this, mints added ridges—also called reeding—to the edges. Clipping became immediately noticeable, as the ridges couldn’t be replicated once the edge was shaved. This was an 18th-century anti-theft measure.

Why Modern Coins Still Have Ridges

Even though coins today aren’t made from gold or silver, many still feature ridges. They help differentiate coins by touch, useful for visually impaired people, and provide a layer of security against modern counterfeiting. Producing perfect ridges still requires professional minting equipment.

Why Some Coins Are Smooth

Not all coins have ridges. Pennies and nickels, made from copper and nickel, never contained valuable metals. There was no incentive to clip them. Today, coins that once held silver, like dimes, quarters, and half dollars, retain their ridges, while others remain smooth.

Coins as Historical Snapshots

Coins reflect culture, design trends, and security needs. Just like watermarks on paper money or holograms on credit cards, reeded edges make tampering obvious. Over time, coin design evolved from material-based security to machine-readable verification, with some modern vending machines sensing the ridges to confirm authenticity.

A Small Detail with Big History

As digital payments grow, coin design focuses more on tradition and usability. Those ridges remain as a nod to centuries of human ingenuity and theft prevention. Next time you hold a coin, feel the ridges—they represent a clever solution to historical challenges and a small but meaningful piece of history.

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