Specifications
Turkish Gold (Cumhuriyet Altını) at a glance
Composition
- Alloy
- Gold (91.6% / 22k) + copper
- Color
- Warm 22k gold
- Thickness
- 0.9 mm
- Available weights
- Quarter (Çeyrek), Half (Yarım), Full (Tam), 2½, 5
Provenance
- Issuing mint
- Turkish State Mint (Darphane) →
- Mint location
- Istanbul, Türkiye
- First minted
- 1923
- Face value
- Trade coin (no fixed denomination)
- Legal tender
- Yes
- IRA eligible (US)
- No
Source: issuing mint specifications, cross-checked against published dealer and grading-service data.
The story
History
Few coins are woven into a society as deeply as the Cumhuriyet altını — the "Republic gold coin" — is into Turkey. Struck by the Turkish State Mint (Darphane) since the founding of the Republic in 1923, it is the everyday gold of Turkish life: bought as a store of value, given at weddings and circumcisions, and pinned to newborns and brides.
It comes in a familiar ladder of fractional sizes — Çeyrek (quarter), Yarım (half), Tam (full) and larger — all to the traditional 22-karat (91.6%) standard. Variants include the original Cumhuriyet, the Ata Lira bearing Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, and ornamental Ziynet (jewelry) coins with a small loop.
In a country that has lived through repeated bouts of high inflation and currency weakness, gold is not an abstraction — it is the savings instrument of ordinary families. The Cumhuriyet altını is the single most widely held gold coin across Turkey and much of the Middle East.
- 1923 — Struck from the founding of the Turkish Republic
- Çeyrek / Yarım / Tam fractional ladder (22k)
- Ata Lira variant features Atatürk
- Turkey’s default household savings and gift gold
The two faces
Design
A portrait of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (on Ata Lira issues) or the Republic’s inscriptions; the design and legends identify the issue and weight.
Inscriptions naming the Republic of Turkey and the coin’s value/weight, with the date — often the founding year referenced in the series.
Representative emblem — no freely-licensed photograph of the Turkish Gold (Cumhuriyet Altını) is available, as its modern design is under mint copyright. The gold coin pictured is a generic Wise With Gold illustration, not the actual Turkish Gold (Cumhuriyet Altını); the genuine obverse and reverse are described above.
Authentication & counterfeit watch
How to spot a genuine Turkish Gold (Cumhuriyet Altını)
A full (Tam) Cumhuriyet weighs 7.216 g at 22-karat, about 22 mm across and very thin; the Çeyrek and Yarım are exact fractions of that. All are non-magnetic. Because the coin exists in many official sizes and ornamental forms, verify the weight against the specific denomination. In Turkey, gold is routinely checked by trusted jewellers; outside the region, weigh precisely and buy from reputable dealers, as the coin’s fame makes it a counterfeiting target.
Authentication guidance is general reference, not a substitute for professional verification. For high-value purchases, buy from reputable dealers and consider professional grading.
For the investor
Investment considerations
The Cumhuriyet altını is bought for cultural and inflation-hedging reasons more than for the lowest premium. Within Turkey and the Middle East it is supremely liquid — every jeweller and exchange office buys and sells it instantly — but outside the region it trades more like scrap 22k gold.
It is not US IRA-eligible (22-karat). Premiums in Turkey are low and the market is deep; for Western investors, however, recognized .999 coins are usually easier to resell. Note that the ornamental Ziynet versions carry a higher making charge for the jewelry finish.
Common questions
Turkish Gold (Cumhuriyet Altını) FAQ
What are Çeyrek, Yarım and Tam?
They are the quarter, half and full Turkish gold coins — a fractional ladder all struck to 22-karat. The Çeyrek (quarter) is the most common gift size.
Is the Cumhuriyet altını IRA-eligible?
No — at 22-karat it is below the 99.5% IRA purity standard. It is a cultural and inflation-hedging coin rather than an IRA coin.
Why is gold so popular in Turkey?
Repeated high inflation and lira weakness have made physical gold the trusted household savings instrument — and gifting gold at weddings and births is a deep tradition.