Those don't exist. The only "silver" pennies were minted in 1943 to support the war effort.
No US one cent coin was EVER struck in silver. It may have been plated or look like silver, but it's not silver. It's just a penny.
It's just a common penny with no added value.
They have been released for circulation, so any you find are face value.
It depends on the year and condition of the penny. If it is from any time in the 1950s or later, it is most likely worth nothing to collectors - so it is worth face value (1 cent). All the D means is that is is made in the Denver mint.
1 cent
One Cent is the value. The US has never made a silver penny. It may look like silver or have been silver plated but it has no collectible value.
The only "silver" penny was minted in 1943 to support the war effort. Yours is probably zinc plated.
That wasn't something done at the mint, rather the cent was likely plated with zinc or nickel. So it has little to no collector value. The US government has never struck a penny in silver.
U.S. pennies have never been made out of silver. On a 1994-D penny, the silver-colored metal below the copper coating is zinc, NOT silver. It's worth one cent.
what is the value of 1945d penny
July 29, 2009 The US Mint has never issued a silver penny. The 1960-D copper cent has a circulated value of about 5-10 cents and an uncirculated coin has a value of up to $60 depending upon the actual condition of the coin.
Lincoln head 1927 D penny
About 1.50
Face value only
1¢
It depends on the date of the uncirculated D penny. Post new question with the correct date.
NO, the US Mint has NEVER made a silver one cent coin. It's common to find penny's that have been plated with silver, chrome and even gold, but they have NO COLLECTIBLE value at all.