The 1944 Lincoln Cent was produced at 3 US Mint facilities; Philadelphia which is shown here as 1944-P, Denver which is shown here as 1944-D and San Francisco which is shown here as 1944-S.
To determine which coin you have it is necessary to locate the mint mark. This mark is a small letter and is located just below the date. The letter "D" is for Denver. The letter "S" is for San Francisco. If there is no letter the coin was minted in Philadelphia. The circulated and uncirculated values of these coins are shown in the following list:
Circulated Grades............1944-P.............1944-D.............1944-S
G4......................................$0.05..............$0.06................$0.06
F12....................................$0.06...............$0.17................$0.07
VF30..................................$0.10...............$0.024..............$0.10
EF40..................................$0.14...............$0.26................$0.14
AU55..................................$0.31..............$0.36.................$0.18
Uncirculated Grades
MS60...................................$0.46.............$0.46...................$0.35
MS63...................................$3.45.............$1.73...................$1.73
MS65...................................$8.40..............$10.80................$8.40
MS67...................................$25.................$22.....................$23
There is also a rare 1944-D variety with a repunched mint mark. It will have a shadow "S" under the "D"; values range anywhere from about $75 to $550 depending on condition.
Sorry, no US twenty cent coins (1875-1878) were struck in 1944 look at the coin again.
About a dollar depending on its condition.
The only 20 cent US coins were minted 1875 - 1878. You have mis-read either the date or the denomination.
About 75¢ for the small amount of silver it contains.
I found a web site for that... The 1944 & 1944 d are worth .03 cents & the 1944 s is worth .04 cents.
Sorry, no US twenty cent coins (1875-1878) were struck in 1944 look at the coin again.
About a dollar depending on its condition.
The only 20 cent US coins were minted 1875 - 1878. You have mis-read either the date or the denomination.
About 75¢ for the small amount of silver it contains.
I found a web site for that... The 1944 & 1944 d are worth .03 cents & the 1944 s is worth .04 cents.
1944 is one of the most common dates for Lincoln wheat cents. It's worth about 3 cents now.
relevantly 64.99 USD
1 US cent has the same value the world over! i.e. 1 US cent
US cents were struck on steel in 1943 not 1944.
First of all the US did not make 20 cents pieces in 1944. Also US coins do not say "Twenty centavos". So your coin is fake. Since it's fake it has no collector value. However if the coin is made of silver it has a silver value.
The 1944 Lincoln cent was the first US coin to exceed ONE BILLION in mintage and is very common and most are face value or 2 cents. Nice uncirculated coins are a dollar or less.
The 1944 Philadelphia issue (no mintmark) Lincoln cent was the first US coin to exceed ONE BILLION in mintage. average value is 3 cents. A brilliant uncirculated coin is 30 cents.