Coin Counter Calculator
Takes how many of each US coin you've got and adds them into a total dollar value plus a combined count, so a jar of loose change becomes a real number.
How it works
Sort your coins into piles, count each pile, and type the numbers in. The calculator multiplies each coin by its value — pennies by one cent, quarters by 25, and so on — then sums it all into one total. Forty quarters and a fistful of dimes stops being a mystery.
It covers the six US coins you'll actually run into: pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, half dollars, and dollar coins. Leave a row at zero if you don't have any, and only the coins you enter get counted toward the total.
Alongside the dollar value you get the total number of coins, which is handy when you're filling paper rolls or checking a coin-jar haul before a trip to the bank. It's the fast way to answer 'how much is in here?' without a counting machine.
Frequently asked questions
How do I total up a jar of coins?
Separate the coins by type, count each kind, and enter those counts. The calculator turns each into cents — a dime is 10, a half dollar is 50 — adds them up, and shows the dollar total plus the overall number of coins.
What are the coin values it uses?
Standard US denominations: penny 1 cent, nickel 5, dime 10, quarter 25, half dollar 50, and the dollar coin at 100 cents. Enter how many of each and the math follows automatically.
Does it help with rolling coins for the bank?
It does — the running coin count tells you when you've got enough for a full roll (50 pennies, 40 nickels, 50 dimes, 40 quarters), and the dollar total confirms the value before you wrap them.