When the coin was minted back in 1943, it was worth exactly one cent. It had no special additional value.
a 1943 D penny is worth 1.7 million dollars
Yes, but they are very very rare and worth a lot of money.
it is not rare enough to have any value [will have value in about 3 years]
A 1943 steel penny with no mintmark can be worth $.35 - $1.50
I looked up a wheat penny chart and it said, a 1943 penny is worth about 15 cents, a 1943 penny with a d mint-mark is worth about 18 cents, and a 1943 penny with an s mint-mark is worth about 20 cents. I'm not sure how recent the chart is, because if the chart is old they could be worth a bit more. But I'm not sure
A 1943 copper penny is known to be worth a lot of money,
a 1943 D penny is worth 1.7 million dollars
Yes, but they are very very rare and worth a lot of money.
it is not rare enough to have any value [will have value in about 3 years]
A 1943 steel penny with no mintmark can be worth $.35 - $1.50
A 1943 steel penny is worth just that 1cent.
1943 12 sided Canadian penny
1.7 Million dollars, that was what a collector recently paid for a 1943 copper penny made at the Denver mint, the only known 1943 copper penny struck there (keep in mind that the 1943 pennies were struck in steel, the copper 1943 pennies are errors).
A "silver penny" is a steel penny. They were minted in 1943, during World War II, because of the copper shortage. To a collector, it may be worth something, yes, but certainly no amount you could retire on.
I looked up a wheat penny chart and it said, a 1943 penny is worth about 15 cents, a 1943 penny with a d mint-mark is worth about 18 cents, and a 1943 penny with an s mint-mark is worth about 20 cents. I'm not sure how recent the chart is, because if the chart is old they could be worth a bit more. But I'm not sure
-In 1943, pennies were made out of steel instead of copper. A 1943 pure copper penny is a rare mint error, and is worth lots.
The 1943 US pennies were steel, not platinum. Their worth depends on condition.