The $1.7 Million 1943 Bronze Lincoln Penny: The Ultimate Coin Rarity

The $1.7 Million 1943

How a Minting Mistake Created the Most Valuable U.S. Cent

This extraordinary 1943 bronze Lincoln cent holds the record as the most valuable penny ever sold, fetching $1.7 million at auction. Here’s why this accidental copper coin is worth more than most houses and how to authenticate one.


Historical Context: The Wartime Error

The 1943 Composition Switch

  • Official Standard: Zinc-coated steel pennies only (to conserve copper for WWII)
  • Accidental Copper Strikes: Estimated 10-15 bronze cents escaped the mint
  • Survival Rate: Only 6 confirmed by PCGS/NGC

Why It’s Rarer Than the 1944 Steel Cent

✔ Fewer Survivors (15 vs. 30)
✔ Earlier Discovery (collectors knew to look for 1944 steels)
✔ Museum Holdings (3 in permanent collections)


Key Identification Features

Diagnostic Checklist

Feature1943 Bronze CentRegular 1943 Steel Cent
Weight3.11g (±0.05g)2.70g
MagnetismNon-magneticStrongly magnetic
ColorReddish-brownSilvery-gray
SoundDull “clink”High-pitched “ping”
EdgeSolid copperZinc coating visible

Date & Mintmark Varieties

All three mints produced accidental copper cents:

  • Philadelphia (no mintmark)
  • Denver (D)
  • San Francisco (S)

Grading & Value Spectrum

Population Report

GradeMintCertificationLast Public Sale
MS64BNSPCGS$1,700,000 (2010)
MS63BNDNGC$1,150,000 (2018)
AU55BNPANACS$840,000 (2021)

Note: All values assume PCGS/NGC certification


Authentication Process

Step-by-Step Verification

  1. Magnet Test: Must NOT stick
  2. Weigh Precisely: 3.11g (±0.05g tolerance)
  3. XRF Analysis: Confirm 95% copper composition
  4. Microscopic Exam: Check for tool marks near date
  5. Professional Grading: PCGS/NGC submission essential

Red Flags of Counterfeits:

❌ Wrong weight (must be 3.11g)
❌ Partial magnetism (indicates plating)
❌ Casting seams or bubbles


Where to Search for Undiscovered Specimens

Best Hunting Grounds

  1. Original 1940s Coin Rolls (especially Philadelphia batches)
  2. Estate Collections (look for old wheat cent albums)
  3. European Holdings (where U.S. coins circulated post-WWII)

Last Found:

A 1943-S bronze cent surfaced in 2017 in a Massachusetts attic – later certified and sold for $1.1 million


If You Find a Potential Specimen

Critical First Steps:

  1. Don’t Clean! (even water damages surfaces)
  2. Handle With Cotton Gloves (fingerprints cause oxidation)
  3. Document Provenance (take timestamped photos)
  4. Secure Storage (bank safety deposit box recommended)

Investment Potential

Value Appreciation

  • 1958: First sold for $40,000
  • 2010: $1.7 million record
  • Projected 2030 Value: $2.5M+

Market Drivers:

  • Ultra-Low Population
  • Museum Demand
  • Historical Significance

Where to Sell

Auction House Options

  1. Heritage Auctions (record-setting sales)
  2. Stack’s Bowers (specializes in coin rarities)
  3. Legend Rare Coin Auctions (private treaty)

Selling Tip:

Insist on PCGS TrueView imaging for global exposure


Free Expert Evaluation

Think you’ve found a 1943 bronze cent? Email clear photos to:
📧 bronzecent@pennyverse.info
Subject: “1943 COPPER CENT”

We’ll provide:
✔ Free preliminary assessment
✔ Current market analysis
✔ Next-step recommendations


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