It's not silver plated. See the related question below for more information.
Sorry it's actually zinc plated steel. They are worth 3 cents to $3
Steel cents were only made in 1943. Your coin is plated. It is considered an altered coin and is worth a penny.
The U.S. never minted a silver penny. It would have more than a dime's worth of silver in it. Your coin has been plated.
U.S. pennies have never contained silver. Your penny is probably silver plated for jewelry or other decorations.
It's steel, not silver, and it's worth about 5 cents.
It's worth only what you can get for it from someone that wants it. It has NO collectible value.
The U.S. never has struck a silver cent. The coin has likely been plated, and is worth just a penny.
If by a "silver penny" you mean one of the 1943 steel cents, then in mint condition it's worth a dollar or two. If you mean some other date, then it's silver plated and has no collector value. And your 1967 penny has been altered -- no added value.
Not silver and not steel - the U.S. has never made silver pennies because they'd be worth more than dimes, and steel cents were only made in 1943, to save copper for use in ammunition. Your coin has been plated for use in jewelry or as part of a school chemistry experiment.
If a genuine zinc plated steel cent, thousands of dollars. More likely a silver plated novelty item worth a few cents. Check with a magnet, if it does not stick, it's a fake. The US never made any 1 cent silver coins, look at the coin again.
It's most likely plated, and it's worth about 1 cent.
It's made of steel, not silver, and it's shiny because it's plated in zinc. If it still has a full zinc coating, it's worth around 50 cents.