Penny production ends after more than 230 years, final coins pressed in Philly


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Summary

End of an era

The U.S. Mint pressed its final pennies Wednesday marking an end to the more than 230 years in production.

Cost of production an issue

The Trump administration cited the high cost of minting the coin – nearly four cents to make each penny – as the key reason behind the decision.

Sticking around

Pennies will remain legal tender, but production has officially stopped.


Full story

While the saying goes “a penny saved is a penny earned,” the U.S. government doesn’t seem to agree. After more than 230 years of continuous production, the U.S. Mint struck its final batch of one-cent coins on Wednesday in Philadelphia – the same city where the first pennies were minted in 1793.

U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach oversaw the ceremonial final press, producing five commemorative pennies marked with an omega symbol to signify the end of an era. Those coins will be auctioned off in the coming weeks, with proceeds benefiting the Mint and the Treasury’s general fund.

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“Given the rapid modernization of the American wallet, the Department of the Treasury and President Donald Trump no longer believe the continued production of the penny is fiscally responsible or necessary to meet the demands of the American public,” Beach said on Wednesday.

Why the penny is being retired

President Trump called for ending the production of pennies in a February Truth Social post, citing the high cost of making the coin.

The Treasury Department confirmed to Straight Arrow News in May that the cost to produce a penny is 3.69 cents, while halting production will save $56 million each year by reducing the material costs of manufacturing.

“Given the cost savings to the taxpayer, this is just another example of our administration cutting waste for the American people and making the government more efficient for the American people,” a Treasury spokesperson said at the time.

Billions of pennies sitting idle

According to the Federal Reserve, Americans are sitting on roughly $14 billion in pennies  – many stashed away in jars, purses or drawers. The Wall Street Journal reports that about $68 million in coins is thrown away each year.

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The first penny featuring President Abraham Lincoln was pressed in 1909 to commemorate his 100th birthday.

“We won’t even waste our time to bring [pennies] back to Coinstar or back to the grocery store,” said Robert Whaples, a Wake Forest University economics professor who has supported retiring the penny since 2007, told The Washington Post. “We won’t even reach down and pick up a penny we see on the sidewalk.”

What happens now

Pennies will remain legal tender for now, with more than 300 billion coins still in circulation. However, as supply dwindles, retailers are expected to round prices to the nearest five cents.

The U.S. Mint has also hinted that the nickel could be next, since each five-cent coin costs nearly 14 cents to make.

A collector’s dream

The final commemorative pennies are expected to become valuable collectors’ items.

Richard De Rosa, a rare coin expert based in Florida, told The Post that a single final-edition coin could sell for as much as $1 million.

For now, the penny, once a symbol of thrift and American tradition, has officially become history.

Jason K. Morrell and Mathew Grisham contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The end of penny production in the United States marks a major shift in the country’s currency system, reflecting changing economic priorities, government policy and evolving consumer behavior.

Currency modernization

The halt in penny production highlights the U.S. government's efforts to modernize the national currency, responding to decreased demand and the evolving use of physical cash.

Cultural change

The discontinuation of the penny, once a symbol of thrift, signals a broader cultural shift away from low-denomination coins and affects everyday transactions and collector interests.

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Synthesized coverage insights across 336 media outlets

Context corner

The penny has been produced in the U.S. since 1793 and traditionally represented frugality and American history. Its declining relevance parallels shifts toward electronic payments and reduced use of small-denomination coins worldwide.

Diverging views

Articles in the left category emphasize the abruptness and confusion caused by the phase-out and highlight business concerns, while right-leaning sources focus more on fiscal responsibility and support the move as common-sense cost-cutting.

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Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

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Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame the penny's discontinuation with sentiment, using terms like "sad day" and "prolonged illness," reflecting on its impact on "piggy banks."
  • Media outlets in the center remain largely factual, citing "cost savings and fading relevance" without strong emotional or political framing.
  • Media outlets on the right emphasize fiscal responsibility, portraying the move as a "bipartisan move" or a decisive "Trump Directive" to "rip the waste out" of the budget.

Media landscape

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336 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • The U.S. Mint has been manufacturing pennies in Philadelphia since 1793, with half of all coins minted there being pennies, totaling around 300 billion in circulation today.
  • Retailers expressed concerns about penny shortages, prompting some to round prices and ask for exact change as supplies dwindled, according to Jeff Lenard of the National Association of Convenience Stores.
  • The Treasury Department expects to save $56 million per year by stopping penny production, but concerns remain about the implications for cash transactions, as noted by the Retail Industry Leaders Association.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Wednesday, the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia struck the final one-cent coin as Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach attended the ceremonial punch.
  • President Donald Trump ordered the Treasury to stop minting pennies earlier this year, citing the cost per penny of 3.69 cents, which exceeds the coin's face value.
  • As coin terminals close, Federal Reserve coin terminal facilities largely stopped taking pennies, and retailers report shortages forcing rounding of cash transactions despite 250 billion pennies in circulation.
  • The Treasury Department estimates ending penny production will save taxpayers about $56 million annually, while officials emphasize pennies as legal tender will keep their value indefinitely.

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Key points from the Right

  • The U.S. Mint in Philadelphia stamped the last two pennies on Nov. 12, 2025, marking the end of penny production after 232 years.
  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated that the decision to cease production is expected to save the Treasury $56 million annually.
  • President Donald Trump declared the intention to stop penny production in February, citing high production costs.
  • Despite ending production, pennies will remain legal tender, with an estimated 300 billion still in circulation.

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