Estonia struck a series of euro cent probe pieces in 2004, years before it was legally permitted to produce euro coinage. These were pattern issues produced to demonstrate minting capability and test designs during Estonia's EU accession process — the country joined the EU in May 2004 but would not adopt the euro until 2011. The multilingual designation across the coin's edge or packaging ("Proov/Essai/Probe") reflects the convention used across candidate nations to identify non-circulating trial pieces submitted for evaluation.
Genuine examples are scarce. Most were distributed to officials and institutions rather than collectors.
Estonia struck a series of euro cent probe pieces in 2004, years before it was legally permitted to produce euro coinage. These were pattern issues produced to demonstrate minting capability and test designs during Estonia's EU accession process — the country joined the EU in May 2004 but would not adopt the euro until 2011. The multilingual designation across the coin's edge or packaging ("Proov/Essai/Probe") reflects the convention used across candidate nations to identify non-circulating trial pieces submitted for evaluation.
Genuine examples are scarce. Most were distributed to officials and institutions rather than collectors.