What this page covers
Topic: South African Krugerrand Series (1967 – Present)
Purpose: Identification, specifications, mintages, and collector guidance.
How to use: Quick facts first, then the detailed tables below.
Coin Reference
Jardines Galleries
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Jardines Galleries · The world's first modern gold bullion coin · 3 July 1967 · 50M+ ounces sold

The Krugerrand.

The world's first modern gold bullion coin, introduced on 3 July 1967 as a vehicle for private gold ownership. Within a decade it had created an entire numismatic category; by 1980 it accounted for 90% of the global gold coin market. Over 50 million ounces have been sold across nearly six decades. The obverse carries Otto Schultz's 1892 portrait of Paul Kruger — the same engraver controversy detailed in the ZAR Hub — paired with Coert Steynberg's 1947 springbok on the reverse. Two heritage designs unified into a single bullion programme that survived sanctions, recovered, and now spans seven gold denominations, silver issues, and the historic 2024 retirement of the Oom Paul Press that struck the very first 1967 coin.

— The naming · "Trojan" → "Krugerrand" · Mr Maré's contribution —
Trojan Krugerrand

Initially referred to internally as the "Trojan" — a reference to its one Troy ounce of gold content — the SA Mint invited public submissions for a permanent name. Credit is given to a Mr Maré, who suggested combining "Kruger" (the President on the obverse) with the "rand" (the South African currency unit). The portmanteau stuck. Krugerrand.

Five chapters

The Krugerrand's history divides cleanly into five chapters. Each marks a structural shift — from collector-only beginnings, to global dominance, through the sanctions-era collapse, into recovery, and finally the modern multi-denomination expansion that continues today.

— Chapter 01 — 1967 – 1969

The collector origin

From 1967 to 1969, Krugerrands were made only as collector's pieces — not yet a mass-market bullion product. 1967 mintage: 40,000 regular plus 10,000 proof. The 1968 and 1969 mintages dropped to 20,000 each. Three years of proof-of-concept production before the real launch.

— Chapter 02 — 1970 – 1984

Global dominance

Mass production began in 1970 with a 211,018-coin first run for international circulation. By 1980, the Krugerrand accounted for 90% of the global gold coin market. The decade leading up to the sanctions ban was the Krugerrand's peak commercial moment — annual sales in the tens of millions of dollars, especially into the United States.

— Chapter 03 — 1985 – 1990

The sanctions era

During the apartheid-era sanctions push, Western countries forbade Krugerrand imports. The United States banned imports in 1985 — the previous year, over $600 million worth of Krugerrands had been sold there. The market collapsed; the Krugerrand fell out of favour. The 1991 GRC Proof at 426 minted reflects the small-scale survival of the programme during this period.

— Chapter 04 — 1991 – 2016

The recovery

Most sanctions were lifted in 1991; the South African Reserve Bank Act of 1989 had already affirmed the Krugerrand's legal-tender status. The 1990s through 2010s saw steady recovery — annual issues, special editions like the 1997 30th Anniversary set, and the ultra-rare 1997 Special Strike Proof at 72 pieces.

— Chapter 05 — 2017 – present

The modern expansion

The 50th-anniversary year saw silver Krugerrands introduced for the first time alongside the new 1/20 oz and 1/50 oz fractional gold issues. 2018 brought the 2 oz gold; 2024 marked the historic retirement of the Oom Paul Press that struck the original 1967 coins; 2025 introduced a 2 oz silver. The product line is now broader than at any point in the coin's history.

— Featured guide · New: March 2026 —

Krugerrand Security Features & International Minting

A comprehensive guide to authenticating Krugerrandsedge serrations (160 vs 220), the distinctive copper-gold alloy, international mintmarks (Berlin 2006, 2010), and advanced testing methods. Essential reading for collectors concerned about counterfeits or intent on understanding the coin's deeper provenance ecosystem.

Read the guide → — New: March 2026 —

Technical specifications

The Krugerrand is struck from a durable 22-carat gold alloy91.67% gold + 8.33% copper — which gives it the distinctive reddish hue and makes it more resistant to scratches and wear than pure gold. The total weight of each coin includes both gold and copper; the gold-only weight (AGW) is the figure that matters for bullion value.

— Gold Krugerrand · seven denominations —
Denomination Introduced Total weight Gold weight (AGW) Diameter
2 oz · gold 2018 67.86 g 2 oz · 62.207 g 40.00 mm
1 oz · gold 1967 33.93 g 1 oz · 31.103 g 32.69 mm
½ oz · gold 1980 16.965 g ½ oz · 15.552 g 27.00 mm
¼ oz · gold 1980 8.482 g ¼ oz · 7.776 g 22.00 mm
1/10 oz · gold 1980 3.393 g 1/10 oz · 3.110 g 16.50 mm
1/20 oz · gold 2017 1.697 g 1/20 oz · 1.555 g 12.00 mm
1/50 oz · gold 2017 0.679 g 1/50 oz · 0.622 g 8.00 mm
— Silver Krugerrand · two denominations · 2017 onwards —
Denomination Introduced Weight Diameter Face value
1 oz · silver 2017 31.1 g 38.7 mm R1
2 oz · silver 2025 62.2 g 50 mm R2
Note: The 1 oz gold remains the flagship denomination — introduced 1967, never discontinued, and still the bullion-market reference. Fractional gold (½, ¼, 1/10) joined in 1980; the ultra-fractional 1/20 and 1/50 issues are 2017 additions. Silver Krugerrands launched in 2017 to mark the 50th anniversary; the 2 oz silver followed in 2025.
— Proof vs Bullion · The edge tells you which —
— Bullion · Uncirculated — 160 Edge reeds

Standard uncirculated finish, higher mintages, lower numismatic premiums. The investor's coin — bought for gold content plus 3 – 30% premium depending on size.

— Proof · Collector finish — 220 Edge reeds

Mirror-like proof finish, lower mintages, higher numismatic premiums. The collector's coin — premiums often 50 – 200% over equivalent bullion. Counted on the edge: 220 vs 160.

Key dates & values

Most common-date Krugerrands trade at small premiums over gold content. Certain key dates command significant numismatic premiums due to lower mintages and collector demand — most notably the 1967 – 1969 collector-only years and the ultra-rare 1997 Special Strike Proof at just 72 pieces.

Year Mintage MS68 value Notes
1967 40,000 $2,500 First year of issue · the original
1967 · proof 10,000 $4,500 Extremely limited proof · first-year
1968 20,000 $2,500 Low mintage collector issue
1969 20,000 $2,500 Last collector-only year
1970 211,018 $2,500 First mass-production year
1991 · GRC Proof 426 $2,000 Gold Reef City Mint
1997 · 30th Anniversary 1,663 $3,000 Special edition
1997 · SS Proof 72 $15,000 Ultra-rare proof · headline result
2006 Berlin Mintmark Limited Premium Otto Schultz mintmark · honouring the engraver
2010 Berlin Bear Limited Premium World Money Fair
The 1967 origin row is highlighted as the foundational issue. The 1997 SS Proof at 72 pieces / $15,000 is the headline numismatic result — the rarest documented Krugerrand proof. Collector-tier issues (1967 – 1969) command premiums driven by their pre-mass-production status; the 2006 Berlin "Otto Schultz" mintmark honours the original 1892 engraver and ties the Krugerrand back to the ZAR cluster.

International mintmarks

— Limited-edition mintmark issues —
  • 2006 "Berlin Otto Schultz" — honouring the original engraver of the Paul Kruger portrait whose initials sparked the 1892 controversy. Struck at the Berlin Mint with a special mintmark to commemorate the lineage.
  • 2010 "Berlin Bear" — issued to mark the World Money Fair in Berlin. The Berlin Bear is the city's heraldic symbol; the mintmark places it alongside the Krugerrand's standard design.
  • 2010 Double Strike Set — combining both Berlin mintmarks into a two-coin presentation. Mintage of only 85 sets, making it among the rarest modern Krugerrand products. Full detail on the Security Features & International Minting page.

Collecting strategies

— Strategy 01 —

Bullion accumulation

Buy annual issues at spot + 3 – 5% premium. Ideal for investors prioritising gold exposure over numismatic upside. Liquidity is excellent; the Krugerrand is recognised globally and trades near spot at any precious-metals dealer.

— Strategy 02 —

Date set

Collect 1 oz from 1967 to present — approximately 58 coins. Key dates include the 1967 – 1970 collector-only issues at premium prices; common-date years are inexpensive. A complete chronological set tells the Krugerrand's story coin by coin.

— Strategy 03 —

Proof set collection

Annual proof sets cost €2,000 – 3,000+ each. Low mintages ensure future rarity; the difference from bullion is immediate (mirror finish, 220 reeds). Best for collectors interested in numismatic appreciation rather than bullion exposure alone.

— Strategy 04 —

Mintmark specials

Target limited-edition issues like the Berlin mintmarks (2006 Otto Schultz, 2010 Berlin Bear) and the Oom Paul Press commemoratives from 2024. These trade at significant premiums and are increasingly difficult to source on secondary markets.

— 2024 · The historic Oom Paul Press retirement —

Final Oom Paul Krugerrands

The press that struck the first 1967 coin · retired after 132 years of service

The historic Oom Paul Press — the same press that struck the very first Krugerrand in 1967 — was retired in 2024 after 132 years of service to South African coinage. The final Krugerrands struck on this press were certified by NGC with the special pedigree "Final Oom Paul Krugerrands".

These coins close a numismatic loop: the same press that opened the modern bullion era in 1967 struck its final issues in 2024. They are highly sought after, both as historical artefacts and as the last products of a 132-year mechanical lineage. Read the full press history on the Oom Paul Press page.

Market information

— Current market reference (2025 – 2026) —
  • Bullion premiums (2026): 1 oz: 3 – 5% · ½ oz: 10 – 15% · ¼ oz: 15 – 20% · 1/10 oz: 20 – 30% over spot. Smaller fractionals carry larger premiums proportional to the manufacturing-cost-to-metal-content ratio.
  • 2025 1/10 oz bullion: approximately R10,224 in South Africa · ~$675 – 725 in the US.
  • 2025 1 oz gold proof: limited to 1,000 pieces — premium significant over equivalent bullion.
  • 2025 1 oz silver proof: limited to 7,500 pieces, approximately €59.50 issue price.

Where to buy

— Local dealers —

South African retailers

  • Randburg Coin — long-established SA dealer.
  • The Scoin Shop — modern issues and bullion.
  • South African MintCoin World, the official source.
— International —

Overseas dealers

  • APMEX — major US bullion dealer.
  • EMK — Germany.
  • MDM — Germany.

Library cross-references

— The engravers —

People Behind the Coins

Otto Schultz (1892 obverse) and Coert Steynberg (1947 reverse) — the two engravers whose work was unified to create the Krugerrand in 1967. Schultz also designed the entire 1892 ZAR coinage; Steynberg's springbok originally appeared on the Union 5-shilling Crown.

— The 1892 obverse origin —

ZAR Hub · 1892 – 1902

The Krugerrand obverse is Otto Schultz's 1892 portrait, originally for the ZAR Pond. The full 1892 controversy — "O.S." initials, double-shaft errors, the Berlin Mint context — is documented across the ZAR cluster. The Krugerrand is the portrait's second life, 75 years later.

— The press —

Oom Paul Press

The 132-year-old press that struck the first Krugerrand in 1967 and the last Final Oom Paul Krugerrands in 2024. The press's full 1892 – 2024 history — including its time at the original Pretoria Mint — has its own dedicated Library page.

— The mint —

SA Mint Today

The operational source for every Krugerrand ever struck. Current programmes, the post-Oom-Paul production landscape, and how the Krugerrand fits into the SA Mint's broader output alongside commemorative series.

Total ounces sold
50M+
1967 – present
Origin year
1967
3 July · world's first bullion
Peak global market
90%
By 1980 · gold coin share
Mint
SA
Pretoria · all years
The South African Numismatic Library A division of Jardines Galleries · © 2026