The production of pennies by the U.S. Mint is ending. That means change for stores and shoppers and cash transactions. Here's ...
Here’s what to know about why and when penny production stopped, how many are in circulation and which rare pennies could be ...
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 ...
The U.S. Mint in Philadelphia says it has pressed its last penny as the country moves closer to phasing out the venerable ...
It's the end of an era. After 233 years, the U.S. Mint will stop making cents. A Treasury Department spokesperson confirmed to USA TODAY that the government placed its last order of blank coins to ...
Even though the U.S. Mint has quit making pennies, they remain legal to use. And you can still get them or deposit them at the bank.
The U.S. has ended production of the penny. The last 1-cent coins were made Wednesday at the mint in Philadelphia.
The government is expected to save $56 million by not minting pennies, according to the Treasury Department. Despite losing money on the penny, the Mint is profitable for the U.S. government through ...
Some McDonald's locations in certain parts of the U.S. have run short of pennies and have begun rounding cash transactions up or down to the nearest five cents when customers don't have exact change, ...