If you have one of these pennies in your piggy bank, you could be looking at a coin worth thousands or even millions of ...
Nearly everyone has a few old coins kicking around. But did you realize that a few cents from the 1950s could be worth hundreds or even thousands of dollars today and help you get ahead financially?
Rare U.S. coins are still slipping through cash registers and coin jars, and some of them can be worth far more than their face value. Recent reporting on valuable pocket change shows that everything ...
Americans are holding an estimated $60-$90 in coins per household. While some rare pennies are valuable, most are worth only a few cents. Consumers can exchange coins for cash at banks, credit unions, ...
America’s last penny was struck at the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia, the end of a coin production that started in 1793 and ended Nov. 12. We’re already starting to miss them. Some stores have begun ...
The U.S. Treasury Department announced that it has stopped producing pennies, ending more than 230 years of minting the 1-cent coin. The penny will remain legal tender and will still be accepted at ...
U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., who helped introduce the bill, has supported the penny production stoppage, calling the one-cent coin "outdated" and "inefficient" and says it "no longer serves ...
You may be surprised to learn that some rare coins minted in the 1960s are still highly valued today. Due to various factors, collectors now prize these rare coins, which means your old coin ...