The U.S. Mint Ends Production of the Penny After More Than a Century

November 13, 2025

The United States penny is officially canceled. On Wednesday, the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia ended production of the one-cent coin, marking the end of an era for a piece of currency that once bought candy, snacks, and school store treats.

The decision comes after years of debate about whether the penny still serves a purpose. Rising manufacturing costs made producing the coin more expensive than its actual value. In addition, digital payments and rounding practices have made the penny increasingly irrelevant in everyday transactions.

Although production has stopped, the penny will remain legal tender. That means Americans can continue using their existing pennies for purchases, coin jars, collections, and transactions. Banks will also continue circulating the coin until supplies naturally decrease.

The end of the penny marks a significant shift in U.S. currency history. For many, it is a nostalgic goodbye to a small coin that represented childhood allowances, coin rolls, and piggy banks. For the government, it represents cost savings and a step toward modernization.

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