I know that 63 years may seem old to someone in their teens or even twenties, but this penny is just a kid numismatically. Unless it is a proof or high-grade uncirculated coin, it is worth about 3 cents.
1963 COPPER penny is worth half a billion dollars.
two dollars
Very little. Since mid 1982, US pennies have been made of 2.5% copper and 97.5% zinc.
2 to 5 cents in circulated grades. This is not a rare coin.
Pennies were made of copper
3 cents.
There is no such thing as a lead penny. In 1945 they were made of copper and zinc. If your penny is indeed lead then it is a counterfeit and is worth nothing. However, if it is copper then it is worth only a few cents in circulated condition.
These coins are common and are worth about 2 to 15 cents in circulated condition.
3 cents.
3-10 cents, depending on condition. But it's not a "copper head"* penny, it's just a copper penny, and if you want to be annoyingly correct it's a bronze cent. (*) Copperheads are a type of snake!
Those are 95 percent copper. A US penny weighs 3.11 grams. Of that, 2.9545 grams is copper.
The 1945 is worth a little more probably because there were less of them minted.
1963 COPPER penny is worth half a billion dollars.
Old coins are valuable because they're old and rare. The 1945 penny isn't worth remarkably more than other coins of its approximate age (in fact, it's worth a lot less than a 1944 steel penny, or a 1943 copper penny, both of which are extremely rare).
A Copper is a term used for a penny because pennies were made out of Copper
Copper pennies minted before 1982 weigh 3.11 grams.
About $3