![](https://cms-cache.coinidentifierai.com/image/1080/335208818640486402.png?x-oss-process=image/resize,s_600)
Reference price
$451,000 – $2,000,000
Mintage: 1
Diameter: 19 mm
Thickness: 1.55 mm
Weight: 3.11 grams
Designer: Victor D Brenner
Metal Composition: 95% Copper – 5% Tin & Zinc
The 1943-D Bronze/Copper Lincoln Wheat Cent is one of the rarest and most intriguing US coins. All 1943 pennies were supposed to be steel cents; however, a few left-over copper planchets from 1942 were utilized during the 1943 transition to steel. While 1943 copper cents were produced at all three mints, only one 1943-D copper cent from the Denver mint is known to exist, although a handful may still be out there awaiting discovery, according to most experts.
![](https://cms-cache.coinidentifierai.com/image/1080/333633935737389056.jpeg?x-oss-process=image/resize,s_600)
Beware fake counterfeits, as this coin is one of the most counterfeited US coins of all time. Fake coins may be created by plating a 1943 steel penny in copper. You can test the coin’s authenticity by holding it close to a magnet. If it sticks, it’s made of steel and is, therefore, a fake. Another tactic to be aware of is scammers filing down the left side of the “8” on a copper 1948 wheat penny to resemble a “3,” tricking people into believing they possess the rare copper 1943 wheat penny.
![](https://cms-cache.coinidentifierai.com/image/1080/333633991571963904.jpeg?x-oss-process=image/resize,s_600)