In this guide we have illustrated some details about
on ebay and other domains that will help you
weed out the fakes. This is
in no way a conclusive or complete guide to every detail about Coach, but it has
enough information to highly increase you chances of spotting the fake Coach handbags.
Combining some of these brand specific points with the universal tells we have listed should
help keep you insulated from many of the fake Coach handbags in the open market.
Note: Many of the images we show to highlight a specific tell, also have another tell
within the same photo. When this occurs we will try to point out the secondary tell also.
However, on occasion we may miss some of the secondary tells in the photos. So we encourage
you the reader to inspect the images for other tells to help increase your spotting skills.
We recommmend that you read our tutorial Spot Fake Handbags
first, to learn the universal tips essential to build a foundation for spotting fake handbag tells. Then reinforce that
foundation with the brand specific tells we highlight here.
As we
get more details we will add them.
Also, if you the reader have anything else to add, please email it to us, we will be glad to
add it to the site: info@spotfakehandbags.com. If we use your tip we will refrence you
and add your web/blog link if applicable.
Disclaimer: Up until 2002 roughly 75% of Coach handbags were manufactured in the US (example at bottom of
guide). Now, most are assembled in China.
Coach is not a premier designer. They are not like Chanel, Fendi, Balenciaga etc. Authentic brand new
Coach handbags will often times sell for less than the amount of a fake Louis Vuitton.
Because of this, and along with the various factories that Coach utilizes, Coach handbags do not
adhere to a specific set of rules. A specific detail that one authentic Coach handbag may have,
another Coach bag may not. Also, Coach has outlets, their bags are discounted and some may even
have minor imperfections. Add to all of this the high demand for Coach, and we have the perfect
storm of counterfeiting. However, there are some details that Coach will not have
on their handbags. In this guide we try to illustrate some of them. Coach is difficult.
But we can give you a fighting chance.
4. Labels: A key piece of evidence in spotting fake Coach.
Image of authentic Coach label:
Info on serial numbers:
Beware: Coach has used many different creeds over the years. They've changed sizes,
fonts, wording, positioning of the numbers, everything. Just because the creed
of a certain bag does not correspond to the paramenters of another handbag does not
confirm it is fake.
Note: Always read the creed before you buy. If the bag is made of Signature fabric
and the creed says it's made of genuine cowhide leather, that is a red flag.
The materials the bag is made from should match the creed statement, the country
where the creed says the bag was made should match the plant code in the serial
number. The stamping
should be even, the stitching should be straight and even and (usually) without
double stitching, the words should be spelled correctly, and the punctuation and
the spacing between words should follow standard (English) rules of grammar.
The 7-number serials were phased out in 1994, and replaced with an alphanumeric
serial number which had three digits representing the factory, year and season, and after the
hyphen, the four digit code for the bag model. For example K4M-5130 would be a Station
Bag (5130), made in 1994 (the number 4 in the prefix). The K & M are factory and
manufacturing codes. So every single Station Bag made in 1994 in that particular factory
could have the identical serial number. And some popular bags were made in more than one
factory so the same style number could have different prefixes on different bags.
Coach did not add the fourth digit in the serial prefix until it was necessary to
prevent year repetition, in 2004.
Coach pre-1994: (y = number) Seven digit serial numbers were used.
Coach post 1994 prefix: (x = letter) Switch to alpha-numeric serial numbers.
y2y = 1992 [All numbers. Example further below of 1992 coach label]
y3y = 1993
x4x = 1994 [Switch to alpha-numeric serial numbers]
x5x = 1995
x6x = 1996
x7x = 1997
x8x = 1998
x9x = 1999
x0x = 2000
x1x = 2001
x2x = 2002
x3x = 2003
x04x = 2004 [Forth number added to avoid repeating year]
x05x = 2005
x06x = 2006
x07x = 2007
x08x = 2008
x09x = 2009
[01/12/10]
Coach creed stamps:
Bullet/target sign/bullseye: Outlet
X: discount store
M: Macy's
N: Nordstroms
FS: Final sale (voids warranty)
ES: Employee sale/ sold to a Coach employee at a discount (seems to also void warranty)
[08/02/10]
Image below of a Coach Label with Coach Outlet bullet-target stamp: The stamp is
located in the upper left corner of the label, indicating this was purchased from
a Coach outlet.
Further notes:
In 2005 and 2006 even more codes were added although the year code is still in the
same place in the sequence. Bags made just for the factory stores/outlets will now often have
the letter F before the style number. Some bags such as the 2006 Legacy line can have
as many as ten digits in the serial number, five on either side of the hyphen, and
current bags made for the Factory Stores can have as many as eleven digits. For one
year in 2005 some style numbers began to include letters and numbers until
Coach decided to expand the style number to five digits.
Below is an example of an authentic Coach 2006 label with the eleven
expanded digits, and the "F" before the style number:
Serial numbers beginning with the letters N thru Z are not valid Coach numbers. If any
of these letters are seen kicking off a Coach serial number sequence it should raise an automatic red flag.
With only two letters or one number and one letter to the left of the hyphen can be
assumed to be fake.
501-20 + all similar numbers starting with 101-, 202-, 501-, 701-, etc., followed
by 2 or 3 numbers after the dash and usually with a patch that says "made in Korea".
Coach never made bags in Korea and never used serial numbers with only 5 or 6 digits
like this:
"xxx-xx" or "xxx-xxx" and without the abbreviated "No." in front of the numbers.
However, a few items with 6-digit serial numbers were manufactured for the 1996
Atlanta Olympic Games, Coach never used serial numbers with 6 digits or less.
501-20 and all similar numbers starting with 101-, 202-, 501-, 701-, etc., followed
by 2 or 3 numbers after the dash and any label that says "made in Korea" are
all warning signs.
Note: Up until the last few years, there was no standard placement for underscores,
dashes and gaps. Every Coach factory
started out with their own templates, therefore it is normal for them to be
different. But always use extra caution when things seem out of place.
Many contemporary Coach serial numbers seem to have spaces after the prefix, and after the
hyphen: x09x - xxxx. Not like: x09x-xxxx. Again, this is not conclusive information yet,
and needs to be updated. [Update 10/3/10] There still seems to be no uniformity with
serial numbers. Some have the dash closer to the first set of numbers, some are centered
perfectly, some have space, others seem cramped. So, currently, the dash is still an x-factor. Something
that will vary from bag to bag, year to year, model to model.
Note: If you purchase from an unauthorized dealer, call Coach,
their representatives will verify if the
authenticity number matches the style, (Coach contact link at the bottom of tutorial).
Image of authentic Coach label: Use this image to compare to the
fake Coach label below.
Image of fake Coach Label: (Note the misspellings, some words run together, and the Coach
impression on top is faint).
[08/01/10]
Below is an authentic vintage (pre 2002)Coach label (1992):
Note: The Creed in this pre-2002, from the year 1992.
This vintage Coach lablel reads
much different than the updated post 2002 Coach Creed. Also, notice that below the creed says that this
handbag was made in the United States, and it is a seven digit all numeric serial number.
The letters were not introduced until 1994. This handbag was made before the switch to
Chinese manufacturing around 2002. The creed reads:
This is a Coach bag. It is made out of a completely natural
glove tanned cowhide. The scars, scratches, veins and wrinkles are natural markings
characteristic of full-grain leathers.
Made in the United States
Metallic Coach label with cursive creed:
[08/29/10]
Below is an authentic metallic style label:
Note: The gold cursive style script writing as seen on
Coach lines such as Legacy. This script should have texture, it
will not be a cheap screen print, if you run your finger over it, you should feel the
ridges. [more info
on this type of label coming].
[12/28/09]
Below is an image of a fake Coach label:
Note: How's this label look? Notice the creed impression, (the impression color looks a little odd itself), compared to the
date code. The date code's stamp impression looks much lighter, much more faint than the creed, almost as if
it was pressed by a different machine altogether, or by using a different technique. Also
notice the stitch line under the numbers 4 and 2 in the first sequence. The stitch line
appears to be doubled up on two links. This is also a warning sign that the bag is not
real Coach. And if these semi-subtle tells
are not enough, then there is more. If you read the creed, you will stumble upon the
word "SURERIOR", a laughable mistake, the word they misspelled is obviously supposed to
be "SUPERIOR".