If they don't show any evidence of corrosion and have little or no wear, values as of 06/2008 would be roughly:
25-60¢ for Philadelphia coins (no mint mark)
40-70¢ for Denver (D below date)
45-90¢ for San Francisco (S below date)
If the coins are actually uncirculated (i.e. in an original bank roll, never spent), those values roughly double. Also, coins are "struck" or "minted", not rolled. Rolled steel describes the process of making the raw metal.
it all depends on what year it is
Steel pennies are worth 12 to 15 cents each and up to 65 cents if they weren't circulated. Steel pennies were made during WWII when cooper was needed to support the troops.
Steel pennies were only minted in 1943. If the penny you have is really a 1944 and is steel it is worth a couple thousand. If however it is really a 1943 it is worth .05 to 1.50 depending on condition. If it has no mintmark and is uncirculated it is worth $12.00. If it has a D and is uncirculated it is worth $15.00. If it has a S and is uncirculated it is worth $25.00. The mintmark is located below the date.
Steel pennies were made in 1943 not 1941.
They can be worth anywhere between 3 and 5 cents, while the 1943 steel pennies can be worth towards 20 cents, all depending on the condition.
Pennies (or one cent coins) were not made of steel in 1965 in the United States (nor in Canada, Great Britain, Australia or New Zealand).
The 1943 US pennies were steel, not platinum. Their worth depends on condition.
Average value of steel cents is 5 to 10 cents.
Average value of steel cents is 3 to 5 cents
Please see the related question below.
Yes in that you can actually sell them, but you can get an entire roll of 50 for $7.00 on eBay.
It's easy! Pennies were never made of silver. They would be worth way more than a cent. Steel pennies were made in 1943. So if you have a penny that was minted in 1943 it's not silver but rather steel.