25 to 50 cents in average condition
Zinc coated steel, not silver. Average value is 5 to 10 cents. The US has never made a one cent coin from silver.
Steel pennies were only made in 1943, during World War II. All 1969 US cents were struck in bronze. Your penny is almost certainly plated for use in jewelry or something similar. It's considered to be an altered coin and has no added value.
The coin is Zinc coated steel not silver, no US one cent coins have been made of silver. Average value is 5 cents.
Zinc coated steel, not silver. average value is 5 to 10 cents. The US has never made a one cent coin from silver.
25 to 50 cents in average condition
The 1970 steel penny is not a genuine US coin as the US Mint did not produce any circulating steel pennies in 1970. Steel pennies were only minted in 1943 due to the shortage of copper during World War II. If you have a 1970 steel penny, it may be altered or counterfeit.
Sorry no steel 1 cent coins dated 1907, only 1943.
It's face value, the coin is still in circulation. The coin is made from zinc not steel, 1943 was the only year the Lincoln cents were made of steel.
US steel cents were only in 1943, on average, value is 5 cents
Zinc coated steel, not silver. Average value is 5 to 10 cents. The US has never made a one cent coin from silver.
The US has never made a one cent coin from silver. Zinc coated steel, not silver.
Steel pennies were only made in 1943, during World War II. All 1969 US cents were struck in bronze. Your penny is almost certainly plated for use in jewelry or something similar. It's considered to be an altered coin and has no added value.
The coin is Zinc coated steel not silver, no US one cent coins have been made of silver. Average value is 5 cents.
Zinc coated steel, not silver. average value is 5 to 10 cents. The US has never made a one cent coin from silver.
All 1941 US and Canadian cents are bronze. The only steel US cents are dated 1943, and were made to save copper for the war effort. Canada used bronze during the war but switched to steel in 2002 as a money-saving move.
The US Mint has never struck a one cent coin in silver, it's zinc coated steel, average value is 5 to 10 cents.