One cent. It's a novelty piece made outside of the Mint by stamping a little image into the coin's obverse. These are available in bulk as giveaways and promotional items, but they have no numismatic value.
The state was stamped on it after it left the mint. It has no collector value -- novelty value is perhaps 25 cents.
A Buffalo Nickel stamped on a penny is worth $800.00. A Jefferson Nickel stamped on a ZN penny is worth $70.00. A Jefferson Nickel stamped on a CU penny is worth $60.00.
i have a penny ,the back is stamped ,the front is slightly stamped like an outline of the face , maybe 2 numbers ,very hard to see
1 cent. It's a novelty item made privately.
A new penny blank planchet is worth $1.50.
They are worth about 6 or 7 dollars the last time I checked. I have a bunch of them. Quarters are worth about 15 dollars. I once had a penny with a nickel stamped on it, I sold it for $80.
The out line of the US was put on the coin after it was made and is a novelty item. It has no collectible value.
No, no genuine Indian Head penny is stamped "COPY" on the reverse, or obverse. All such examples are replicas containing no collector value. The only value that such coins have is the value of what they are made out of.
Soundslike a magician's coin -- worth a couple of dollars.
The coin is only one cent, the counter stamped date adds nothing to the value.
2 or 3 cents for the copper. 1 cent face value for the coin. Anything added to a coin post minting, such as a "G" stamped on it ruins the coins value to a collector.
This is a novelty coin not made by the US mint and has no collectible value.