List of bi-metallic coins by release date
This list includes discontinued and commemorative bi-metallic coins minted since 1982.
- Abkhazia — 1 Aspar in 2022
 - Albania — 100 Leke in 2000
 - Alderney — 50 Pounds in 2002
 - Algeria — 10, 20, and 50 Dinar in 1992
 - Andaman and Nicobar — 10 and 20 Rupees as part of a Limited-Edition Release in 2011
 - Andorra — 2 Diners in 1985
 - Angola — 5 and 10 Kwanzas in 2012 and the 20 Kwanzas in 2014
 - Argentina — 1 Peso coin in 1994
 - Armenia — 500 Dram in 2003
 - Australia — commemorative 5, 10, 20, 25, 50, 75, and 100 Dollar coins, the 5 Dollar being the first in 1994
 - Azerbaijan — 50 Qəpik in 1992
 - Bahrain — 100 fil coin in 1992 and the 500 Fils in 2000
 - Belarus — 2 Roubles in 2009 and the Commemorative 20 Roubles in 2016
 - Benin — commemorative 500 Francs in 2022
 - Bhutan — 2000 Ngultrums in 2002
 - Bolivia — 5 Boliviar in 2001 and the 1000 Boliviar in 2005
 - Bosnia and Herzegovina — Convertible Mark in 2000
 - Botswana — 5 Pula in 2000, and the 2 Pula in 2013
 - British Indian Ocean Territories — 1 and 2 Pound coin in 2021
 - British territories such as Stoltenhoff Island, Nightingale Island and Tristan da Cunha — 25-Pence in 2008
 - British Virgin Islands — 75 Dollar coin in 2004 and 2007
 - Bulgaria — 1 Lev in 2002 and the 2 Leva in 2015
 - Cambodia — 500 Riels in 1994
 - Canada — $2 coin (nicknamed "toonie") in 1996[1]
 - Cape Verde — 100 Escudo coin in 1994, a 250 Escudos in 2013 and a 200 Escudos in 20??
 - French Pacific Territories — 200 Francs coin in 2021
 - Chad — 1000 franc coin in 2019
 - Chile — 100 and 500 pesos in 2000
 - China — 50 Yuan in 1990, 25 Yuan coin in 1992, a 10 Yuan coin in 1994, and a 500 Yuan coin in 1995
 - Colombia — 500 Pesos in 1993
 - Comoros — 250 francs in 2013
 - The Cook Islands — $50 coin in 1997, a $150 in 2005, a $1 in 2010, and a $100 in 2014
 - Costa Rica — 500-colones coin in November 2021
 - Croatia — 25 Kuna in 1997
 - Cuba — 500 Pesos in 2000, and a 5 Peso coin in 2016
 - Czech Republic — 50 Korun in 1993
 - The Czech Republic — 50 Kč coin in 1993
 - Djibouti — 250 Francs coin in 2012
 - Dominican Republic — 5 and 10 Pesos in 2005
 - Ecuador — 100, 500, and 1000 Sucres coin in 1996
 - Egypt — 1 Pound coin in 2005
 - Eurozone — €1 and €2 coins on 1 January 2002
 - El Salvador — 5 Colones in 1997
 - Ethiopia — 1 Birr in 2002
 - Falkland Islands — 2 Pounds in 1999 and 2000
 - Finland in 1993 — 10 Markaa coin
 - France — 10-francs coin in 1988
 - Georgia — 10 Lari in 2000 and the 2 Lari in 2006
 - Ghana — 1 Cedi coin in 2007, and a 2 Cedis coin in 2019
 - Gibraltar — 4.2 ECU and 2 Pounds in 1994 and 1996
 - Hong Kong — 10 Dollar coin in 1993
 - Hong Kong — $10 coin in 1993
 - Hungary — 100-Forint coin in 1996 and a 200 Forint coin in 2009
 - India — ₹10 coin since 2009 and a bi-metallic ₹20 coin since 2019
 - Indonesia — Rp 1,000 coin in 1993
 - Iran — 250 Rials in 1993 and the 500 Rials in 2003
 - The Isle Of Man — 1/4 Angel, Noble and Crown in 1995
 - Israel, — ₪10 coin in 1995
 - Italy — 500 Lira in 1982
 - Jamaica — 20 Dollars in 2000
 - Japan — 500 yen coin since 2021
 - Jordan — 1/2 dinar in 1997
 - Kazakhstan in 2002 — 100 and 200 Tenge
 - Kenya — 10 Shillings in 1994
 - Latvia — 2 Lati in 1999
 - Lesotho — 5 Maloti in 1995
 - Macau — 100 Patacas in 1997
 - Mexico — 100 and 1000 Pesos in 1989
 - Micronesia — 5 Dollar coin in 2012[1]
 - Moldova — 5 and 10 Lei in 1991
 - Monaco — 10 Francs in 1989
 - Monaco — 10 francs in 1988
 - Morocco — 5-dirhams coin in 1987
 - New Zealand — commemorative 50 Cent coin in 1994
 - North Korea — 1 Won in 2004
 - The Philippines — 10-peso coin from 2000 to 2017 and a 20-peso coin since 2019[2]
 - Portugal in 1991 — 200 Escudos
 - Russia — Commemorative 3, 5, and 10 'North Pole' Roubles since 2014
 - Saint Helena and Ascension — 2 Pound coin in 2003
 - Singapore — 1-dollar coin since 2013
 - Somaliland — 2500 Shillings to commemorate the queen of Ghana in 2016
 - South Africa — 5 Rand coin in 2005
 - Thailand — 10 baht in 1988
 - The Bahamas — 2 Dollar coin in 2000
 - Tokelau — 1 Dollar coin in 2017
 - Turkey — 50 Kuru and the 1 Lira in 2009[3]
 - United Kingdom — £2 coin since 1997, and a bi-metallic £1 coin since March 2017
 - United States — $10 Library of Congress in 2000
 - The Vatican City — 5 Euro coin in June 2024[1]
 
References
- ^ a b c Michael, T. (2020-08-04). 2020 Standard Catalogue World Coins 2001- Date 14ed. Krause Publications. ISBN 978-1-4402-4897-9.
 - ^ Michael, Thomas; Schmidt, Tracy L. (2019-07-09). 2020 Standard Catalog of World Coins 1901-2000. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-4402-4896-2.
 - ^ Reinfeld, Fred (2009). Catalogue of the World's Most Popular Coins. Ishi Press International. ISBN 978-4-87187-800-5.