One cent, 1967 cents are not rare and are not really worth more than face. Yes, it is struck in copper which makes it worth about 2 and a half cents in bullion value based on the copper, but due to the fact it is illegal to export or melt pennies, there are very, very, few buyers who would be willing to pay that much for a coin they can find in their own pocketchange.
Face value the date is still in circulation.
2 cents, due to the copper content.
Assuming you mean a U.S. cent and not a U.K. penny, yes - it's worth its face value, but nothing more.
Unless there is something special about it, its value is one cent.
Please check again. There were no S-mint cents struck from 1956 to 1967 inclusive.
The last Australian Penny was minted in 1964.
Face value the date is still in circulation.
like a penny or what we value as a penny
face value
Face value only.
2 cents, due to the copper content.
SIMPLE ANSWER: No US coin dated 1965, 1966 or 1967 will have a mintmark, it's just a penny.
Assuming you mean a U.S. cent and not a U.K. penny, yes - it's worth its face value, but nothing more.
Unless there is something special about it, its value is one cent.
Canada has not celebrated a bicentennial. The 1967 coin is the Centennial penny. It's worth face value, .01 cent.
The last New Zealand Penny was minted in 1964. New Zealand converted to decimal currency in 1967.
A particularly nice one might sell for a dollar.