US US Treasury confirms the end of the penny

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Image caption, The US Mint says there will be an immediate annual saving of $56m (£42m) when they cease productionArticle information
  • Author, Shanaz Musafer
  • Role, Business reporter, BBC News
  • 3 hours ago
One cent coins will stop being produced in the US next year, the Treasury Department has confirmed.
It marks the phasing out of the coins, commonly known as pennies, which have been in circulation for more than two centuries.
President Donald Trump told Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in February to stop minting the coins, calling them "wasteful".
There has been a long debate over the cost and usefulness of pennies in the US.

In January, Elon Musk's unofficial Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) drew attention to the cost of minting pennies in a post on X.

Final order​

The penny was one of the first coins made by the US Mint, entering circulation in 1793.
But over the past 10 years, the cost of producing it has risen from 1.3 cents to 3.69 cents per coin, according to the Treasury.
The Mint estimates that stopping production will result in an immediate annual saving of $56m (£42m) in reduced material costs.
Critics of the zinc and copper coin say producing it is a waste of money and resources, while those who want to keep it argue it keeps prices lower and boosts fund-raising for charities.
The phasing out of the coins will mean businesses will need to round prices up or down, according to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), who first reported the story.
"Confirming the WSJ story, the Treasury has made its final order of penny blanks this month and the United States Mint will continue to manufacture pennies while an inventory of penny blanks exists," a Treasury spokesperson said.
Other countries have discontinued similar coins. Canada ditched its one cent coin in 2012, citing the cost of minting it and its falling purchasing power due to higher prices.
The declining use of cash meant the UK did not mint any new coins in 2024, after officials decided there were already enough coins in circulation.
The UK Treasury has said that 1p or 2p coins are not being scrapped, but with more people living cashless lives, there have been several years when no 2p coins were produced.
 
The easiest fix is a three coin solution:

A 1/10th piece
A 3/10th piece
A 5/10th piece

These three coins are the quickest and most efficient way to break down a whole and at the end of the day messing with pennies and smaller coins leads to the ton foolery with charging .999 and other oddities.
 
The "leave a penny" tray at every store I go to is always overflowing.

Hardly anyone uses them anymore.

Finding a palmful vacuuming out a car or sofa nowadays? You're more likely to toss them in the trash.

Inflation has meant it's tedious to carry enough of them to make even a minor purchase, and electronic sales transactions have long since put a damper on the need for carrying pocket change at all. Vending machines and parking meters have long since gone credit/debit capable.

Its time has simply passed.



Though the baggie of steel pennies from WWII my Grandma hoarded is still pretty cool.
 
The easiest fix is a three coin solution:

A 1/10th piece
A 3/10th piece
A 5/10th piece

These three coins are the quickest and most efficient way to break down a whole and at the end of the day messing with pennies and smaller coins leads to the ton foolery with charging .999 and other oddities.

I agree that decimalization has been a failure, but with how much the attempted metrification in the 70s was a shitshow I can't imagine how poorly doing the opposite would be.
 
Apparently 1.19million pounds of pennies were produced in 2024. The US used 911,000 tonnes(metric) of zinc in 2023.

Assuming a penny was 100% zinc, which it almost is these days. By my horrible math, puts the penny usage at about 0.05% of what was consumed by the US. I think the zinc companies will be fine.
Will this cause people to start hoarding pennies just in case some penny collector market appears?
Most people already horde pennies since they're not worth carrying around. My mom has probably a couple hundred pounds.
 
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