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Friday Nov 14 2025 00:00
2 min
The United States has officially announced the cessation of one-cent coin (penny) production, ending a 230-year run for the small denomination. This decision is driven by the accelerating shift towards digital payments and the significantly increased costs of producing pennies.
Following the US Treasury's decision to phase out the penny, the Philadelphia Mint completed the printing of the last batch of coins on Wednesday. The production cost of a single penny has climbed to nearly four times its face value.
“With the rapid modernization of payment systems in the United States, the Treasury Department and President Trump believe that continuing to produce pennies is neither fiscally responsible nor meeting the needs of the public,” stated Brandon Beach, US Treasury Secretary, at the mint.
The gradual phasing out of the penny, which has been in circulation since 1793, is attributed to the widespread adoption of digital payment systems, reducing its use among consumers and retailers. Over the past decade, the production cost of a single penny has risen from 1.42 cents to 3.39 cents.
The US Mint estimates that halting the production of this denomination will save $56 million annually in material costs. In the last fiscal year, the one-cent coin accounted for 57% of the total circulating coins produced by the mint.
US retailers have already begun automatically rounding cash transactions from one cent to five cents. However, the retail sector warns that the rapid disappearance of the penny may cause operational problems, such as difficulties in providing change when cashing checks at point of sale.
Despite the halt in new coin production, circulating pennies will remain usable in stores. Beach emphasized: “While today we bid farewell to the continued production of the copper penny, it must be clear: the penny remains legal tender. We have over 300 billion coins in circulation, and we encourage everyone to continue using them.”
Trump previously described penny production as “extremely wasteful” and earlier this year instructed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to gradually reduce production. The Treasury Department stopped ordering the coin in May, and the Mint ended large-scale production in June.
The final batch of five pennies printed on Wednesday will not enter circulation but will be auctioned off by the Mint. The coins bear a special “Ω” mark on the shoulder of Lincoln's image on the obverse, as a historical commemoration.
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