As it marks 500 years, the iconic Sovereign gets enhanced security, and a move from red to yellow gold for the 2026 range

There was some speculation last year about The Royal Mint’s ultra-iconic coin, The Sovereign, making the move from 22kt gold (0.9167 fineness) to 0.9999 fineness, which appeared to create some debate and consternation. The Royal Mint even issued a statement denying the change, and that was the end of it. However, in 2026, the 500th anniversary since Henry VIII took time out from lopping heads off to instruct its creation, changes are afoot.

The Sovereign was brought back to the fore in 1817, sporting the now iconic St George artwork of Benedetto Pistrucci, and continued to be struck in 22kt gold, with the metal alloyed with a varying mix of copper and silver, although silver was gradually replaced almost entirely by copper as the years progressed. Red gold gets its hue from the copper, while yellow gold is either purer, or alloyed with silver instead, and the modern Sovereign has carried that reddish tinge for decades. For 2026, it appears the copper is gone, and even though it remains at 0.9167 fineness, the yellow colour is now the hue of choice.

The design of the proof range remains essentially unchanged apart from that, but the bullion coin has had its security enhanced. Already one of the most secure coins in the world, with its weight guaranteed to five decimal places, the reverse face now has a border of micro-engraved text around its rim. The obverse has a background pattern, and a latent image, both of which you can see in one of the images below. Whether the change to yellow gold is trotted out to the mints many other gold coins remains to be seen.

With gold sales on a high, we’d expect these to fly off the shelves given their significance. Our understanding is that these will be available to purchase on the Royal Mint website later today, so keep your eye out, and please use the banner link below, so we get a small, and much-needed sweetener at no cost to you. Thank you.

GALLERY

A comparison of red and yellow gold using Sovereign artwork

The 2026 range

The proof (left) and bullion coins compared

The ring of micro-text on the bullion coin reverse

The latent image on the obverse of the bullion coin

Proof Sovereigns

Striking a proof Sovereign

COIN SPECSDENOMINATIONCOMPOSITIONDIAMETERFINISHMINTAGE
FIVE SOVEREIGNUndenominated39.94 g of 0.9167 gold36.02 mmProof510
DOUBLE SOVEREIGNUndenominated15.976 g of 0.9167 gold28.40 mmProof810
SOVEREIGNUndenominated7.988 g of 0.9167 gold22.05 mmProof4,836
FROSTED SOVEREIGNUndenominated7.988 g of 0.9167 gold22.05 mmProof, Frosted3,310
HALF SOVEREIGNUndenominated3.994 g of 0.9167 gold19.30 mmProof3,160
QUARTER SOVEREIGNUndenominated1.997 g of 0.9167 gold13.50 mmProof1,460
SILVER SOVEREIGNUndenominated7.988 g of 0.999 silver22.05 mmProof20,010
FIVE SOVEREIGN BUUndenominated39.94 g of 0.9167 gold36.02 mmBU360

There are also the usual range of sets on offer, with a mix of sizes, finishes, or years, and ranging in price from £2,095, to £9,950. As well as the sets below, there’s a brilliant three-coin set that contains an 1826, a 1926, and a 2026 Sovereign.

SETS CONTENTSFIVEFOURTHREETWO (2025/26)TWO FINISHES
FIVE SOVEREIGNYES
DOUBLE SOVEREIGNYESYES
SOVEREIGNYESYESYESYESYES
FROSTED SOVEREIGNYES
HALF SOVEREIGNYESYESYES
QUARTER SOVEREIGNYESYESYES
2025 SOVEREIGNYES