Heads or Tails? Trump Instructs Treasury to Stop Making Pennies
‘For far too long the United States has minted pennies which literally cost us more than 2 cents,’ President Donald Trump said on Truth Social.
President Donald Trump confirmed over the weekend that he requested the Treasury Department to stop producing pennies.
“For far too long the United States has minted pennies which literally cost us more than 2 cents,“ the president said. ”This is so wasteful! I have instructed my Secretary of the U.S. Treasury to stop producing new pennies. Let’s rip the waste out of our great nation’s budget, even if it’s a penny at a time.”
Making Cents of the Cent
The U.S. Mint created the nation’s first circulating penny in 1793, which was produced entirely from copper. Over the years, the cent’s metal content and design have changed.
Today, the penny is made primarily out of zinc with copper plating.
For the new administration, the issue is that the federal government spends more to create one-cent coins than its face value is worth.
Over the decades, there have been congressional efforts to kill the penny.
The 1989 Price Rounding Act, the 2006 Currency Overhaul for an Industrious Nation (COIN), and the 2017 Currency Optimization Innovation and National Savings (COIN) Act would have eliminated the penny and mandated rounding prices to the nearest five cents. None of these bills became law.
Even former President Barack Obama weighed in on the issue.
Obama may have touched upon a potential hurdle for the United States to overcome its penny fixation.
“We remember our piggy banks and counting up all our pennies and taking them in and getting a dollar bill or a couple dollars from them, and maybe that’s the reason people haven’t gotten around to it,” he said.
Other Countries Down to Their Last Penny
The United States would not be the first country to ditch the penny.

Nickels are seen in a 2016 photo illustration. Graeme Roy/The Canadian Press
In 2012, Canada began phasing out the penny and requested businesses to round prices to the nearest nickel for cash transactions. Digital transactions continued to be billed to the nearest cent. The penny is still accepted in commerce but no longer produced.
Brazil, Finland, Israel, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland have also withdrawn low-denomination coins from circulation.
A Penny for Your Thoughts
While opinion polling on this issue is minimal, the available research suggests mixed views about the low-value coin.
“Low-income consumers stand to be most affected by the change because they are more likely to be unbanked and reliant on cash for transactions,” the regional central bank wrote. “In the short term, at least, merchants might round purchases for customers paying in cash but not for those paying with card, potentially disadvantaging consumers who have no choice but to pay in cash.”
In the Nickel of Time
Could the nickel be the next target for the administration?
It costs 13.8 cents to manufacture a five-cent nickel. The U.S. Mint says that 11 cents are dedicated to production costs, and the remaining 2.8 cents are allocated to administrative and distribution costs.
If the White House follows through on phasing out the penny, the United States will likely need to increase the volume of nickels in circulation to offset the loss of the penny. Ultimately, it might cost more to eradicate the one-cent coin and ramp up the output of five-cent nickels.
Although payment apps and credit cards are prevalent for transactions, many consumers depend on cash, a growing preference in today’s hyper-digital marketplace.