What this page covers
Topic: 1925 Threepence Design Change
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 · A Union-era key date

The 1925 Threepence Design Change.

A key variety in Union coinage. Two distinct reverse designs exist for the same year — the original numeric "3" in a mimosa wreath (1923–1925) and the protea flower reverse (1925–1930) that replaced it mid-year. The 1925 mintage of 357,584 is the lowest of the entire 1925–1930 series, making it the field's key date; the first-design variety is markedly scarcer than the second, and a high-grade example sold for $3,995 at Stack's Bowers in 2016 — eight times catalogue value.

— The mid-1925 changeover —
First design Numeric "3" 1923 – 1925 Mimosa wreath
Mid-1925
Second design Protea 1925 – 1930 National flower

The transition

In 1925, the South African Mint — at the time a branch of the Royal Mint operating in Pretoria from 1923 to 1941 — revised the reverse designs of several denominations. The threepence was among them, and both old and new designs were struck during the year, creating two distinct varieties for the same date. (See the Pretoria Mint page for the broader history of mint operations on this site.)

The threepence was struck in South Africa from 1923 to 1960, in .800 fine silver until 1930 and .500 fine thereafter. The first issues (1923–1925) carried the numeric "3" reverse with mimosa wreath; from 1925 onwards, the protea flower reverse took its place and continued in modified forms through 1936. The numeric reverse is the scarcer of the two for 1925.

The obverse — a crowned portrait of King George V facing left — was designed by Edgar Bertram MacKennal; the reverse by George Kruger Gray. Both engravers' work appears across multiple Commonwealth coinages of the period. The obverse remained constant across the 1925 transition; only the reverse design changed.

First design — numeric reverse

The original reverse. A numeric "3" at centre, encircled by a wreath of mimosa, with the inscription running around the rim and the value stated at the base. Scarcer for 1925 because the design was retired mid-year.

Obverse

Crowned George V, facing left

  • Crowned portrait of King George V facing left.
  • Legend: "GEORGIVS V REX IMPERATOR".
  • Designer's initials "B.M." (Bertram MacKennal) on the truncation.
Reverse

Numeric "3" in mimosa wreath

  • Wreath of mimosa encircling the figure "3".
  • Inscription: "SOUTH AFRICA · 1925 · ZUID AFRIKA".
  • Value "3 PENCE" at the base.
  • Designer's initials "K G" (Kruger Gray) below the wreath.
Catalogue · KM-15A · Hern-S123

Second design — protea reverse

The replacement design — a stylised protea flower, native to the Cape, with three lines surrounding the bloom and three bundles of poles forming a triangle around it. The protea would dominate the threepence reverse for the rest of the decade.

Obverse

Crowned George V, facing left

  • Crowned portrait of King George V facing left — unchanged from the first design.
  • Legend: "GEORGIVS V REX IMPERATOR".
  • Designer's initials "B.M." (Bertram MacKennal) on the truncation.
Reverse

Protea flower

  • A protea flower, native to South Africa, surrounded by three lines.
  • The flower is set inside a triangle of three bundles of poles.
  • Inscription: "SOUTH AFRICA · 1925 · ZUID AFRIKA".
  • Value "3 PENCE" at the base.
  • Designer's initials "K G" (Kruger Gray) on the stem of the flower.
Catalogue · KM-15.1 · Hern S124–129 (1925 – 1930 issues)

Technical specifications

Weight
1.414 g
0.8 g pure silver
Diameter
16.3 mm
0.99 mm thick
Composition
.800 silver
.500 from 1930
Edge / orientation
Plain
Medal alignment ↑↑

Mintage figures

The 1925 total — 357,584 across both varieties combined — is dramatically lower than the millions struck in subsequent years. This single fact is what makes 1925 the key date of the entire 1925–1930 series.

Year Mintage Notes
1925 357,584 Both designs combined · key date · numeric reverse scarcer
1926 1,572,059 Protea reverse only.
1927 2,284,964 Protea reverse · highest year of the series.
1928 919,390 Protea reverse.
1929 1,947,895 Protea reverse.
1930 980,718 Last year of .800 silver; 1931+ becomes .500.
— Total 1925 – 1930 — 8,063,030 1925 represents just 4.4%
Reading the collapse: the 1925 figure is approximately 4.4% of the six-year total. Subsequent years run between 920k and 2.3M; 1925 stands at a fraction of any of them. This proportional rarity, further amplified within 1925 by the mid-year design change, makes the first-design variety genuinely scarce — and is the reason a high-grade example commanded eight times catalogue value at auction.

Rarity & values

— Stack's Bowers ANA · August 2016 —

The $3,995 first-design MS-63

Anaheim, CA · NGC MS-63 · Numeric reverse · Eight times catalogue value

"A choice lustrous example with almond-color tone clinging to the devices. The numeric reverse is the scarcer of the two for 1925, though this specimen realised eight times the catalogue value." — Stack's Bowers catalogue description.

$3,995— Hammer · 2016 —

A second confirmed sale at Noonans Mayfair (April 2020): a 1925 threepence (Type 1) sold as part of a lot with other George V coins for £70 (~$90), with the individual coin valued at £40–50. Beyond these two records, the values below summarise the typical market range by grade.

Variety Grade Estimated value
First design
Numeric — KM-15A
VF · Very Fine $40 – $60
EF · Extremely Fine $80 – $120
UNC · Uncirculated $200 – $300+
Second design
Protea — KM-15.1
VF · Very Fine $20 – $30
EF · Extremely Fine $40 – $60
UNC · Uncirculated $100 – $150
Reading the spread: the first-design variety trades at roughly double the second-design equivalent at every grade tier. The 2016 MS-63 hammer of $3,995 sits an order of magnitude above the UNC range — high-grade certified examples of the scarcer variety command significant premiums beyond the standard market.

Notes for collectors

01 · Distinguishing varieties

Numeric vs protea

The first design shows a clear numeric "3" inside a mimosa wreath. The second design features the distinctive protea flower. Easily told apart with the coin in hand.

02 · Scarcity

Numeric reverse scarcer

The numeric reverse is considerably scarcer than the protea reverse for 1925, as the change occurred mid-year. Always verify which variety you have.

03 · Condition

High-grade premium

MS-63 or better examples of the first design are extremely rare and command significant premiums — as the $3,995 Stack's Bowers result demonstrates.

04 · Authenticity

Beware cleaned examples

As with all South African silver, cleaning significantly reduces value. Look for original toning; surface lustre that's been wiped or polished can knock 50% or more off market price.

1925 mintage
357,584
Lowest of 1925 – 1930 series
Designs in 1925
2
Numeric · Protea
2016 hammer
$3,995
Stack's Bowers · MS-63 first design
Multiple of catalogue
High-grade premium
— Sources —
  • Hern, Brian, with Bothma, John & Peterse, HercieHern's Handbook on South African Coins and Patterns.
  • Krause-MishlerStandard Catalog of World Coins.
  • Stack's Bowers — ANA Auction (Anaheim, CA, August 2016) — the $3,995 MS-63 first-design sale.
  • Noonans Mayfair — "The Collection of British Colonial Coins formed by the late John Roberts-Lewis," 22 April 2020.
  • CoinVarieties.com — South Africa 1925 3 pence KM-15A.
  • NumizMarket, Coin ID Scanner, Colnect — design and specification references.
  • Cross-references: Pretoria Mint (Royal Mint branch 1923–1941), People Behind the Coins (MacKennal & Kruger Gray), Error Coin Encyclopedia.

Revision history

22 February 2026 Initial build — expanded with verified mintage data, auction records, and detailed design descriptions.
The South African Numismatic Library A division of Jardines Galleries · © 2026