If it's a genuine 1943 copper cent, it's worth no less than $10,000. That said, most copper 1943 cents are counterfeits.
Copper pennies from the year 1943 are exceedingly rare. Finding one would be extremely fortuitous. They are worth several thousand dollars.
The value of a copper 1943 penny is $200,000+. However, copper-plated counterfeits are prevalent. In order to test for a counterfeit, run a magnet over the penny. If it doesn't stick, you are now the proud owner one of the rarest mis-struck coins in U.S. Mint history.
A genuine 1943 copper cent is worth at least $100,000. However, there are only upwards of 40 known to exist; the rest are copper-coated steel cents or altered 1948 cents. A real one isn't magnetic.
It's worth about 2 cents for the copper.
A genuine 1943 copper (bronze actually) cent exceeds $100,000.00 in value.
Copper pennies from the year 1943 are exceedingly rare. Finding one would be extremely fortuitous. They are worth several thousand dollars.
They are worth at least one cent up to thousands for a 1943 copper one. There were supposedly a few 1943 struck in copper and the rest are steel. Most have some slight value over the one cent.
The value of a copper 1943 penny is $200,000+. However, copper-plated counterfeits are prevalent. In order to test for a counterfeit, run a magnet over the penny. If it doesn't stick, you are now the proud owner one of the rarest mis-struck coins in U.S. Mint history.
A genuine 1943 copper cent is worth at least $100,000. However, there are only upwards of 40 known to exist; the rest are copper-coated steel cents or altered 1948 cents. A real one isn't magnetic.
The highest worth of a 1943 steel penny is about $10,000 for one that is in mint condition and graded by a professional coin grading service as being in flawless condition. These pennies are rare because steel was used in place of copper due to the shortage during WWII.
The only way you will get one for cheap is if it is a counterfeit. The real ones are worth thousands of dollars.
A genuine 1943 copper cent is worth at least $100,000. However, there are only upwards of 40 known to exist; the rest are copper-coated steel cents or altered 1948 cents. A real one isn't magnetic.
It's worth about 2 cents for the copper.
one cent
A genuine 1943 copper (bronze actually) cent exceeds $100,000.00 in value.
When the coin was minted back in 1943, it was worth exactly one cent. It had no special additional value.
If there is a 1909 penny with the back of a dime, it is a magician's coin made by a private company, not a mint product. About 2 years ago there was a news story about a collector who had left his copper 1943 penny laying around and his wife spent it. That is the only thing that is checked by a magnet - a normal 1943 cent is the only penny that will stick to a magnet and a copper one will not. Anyway, that story was a bunch of BS and the "collector" admitted it.