
When Wartime Zinc Gets the Spotlight
Most 1943 steel cents spend their lives in coffee cans and junk drawers. But top-pop pieces are a totally different animal. GreatCollections has two 1943-S steel cents, both graded PCGS MS-68, with current bids (per the email) of $2,128 and $1,255.
For a coin many people think is “common,” four-figure bidding is the perfect reminder: condition rarity is real.
Why 1943 Lincoln Cents Were Made of Steel
The switch from copper to steel in 1943 was a direct result of World War II, when copper was urgently needed for military equipment, wiring, and ammunition. To conserve the metal, the U.S. Mint struck Lincoln cents on zinc-coated steel planchets for a single year. While this solved the material shortage, it created a coin that behaved very differently in circulation. Steel cents were prone to spotting, corrosion, and confusion with dimes once their zinc coating wore thin. As a result, truly clean and original examples are far scarcer than their massive mintage numbers suggest. That’s why high-grade survivors like PCGS MS-68 pieces stand out today, they represent the small fraction that avoided decades of damage and mishandling.
What’s in the 1943-S Steel Cent Offerings
These are standard business strikes on zinc-coated steel planchets, but the grade is where the story is.
At MS-68, you are paying for:
- Clean fields
- Strong luster
- Minimal spotting and surface issues
Steel cents are notorious for spots and ugly surfaces, so high-grade, attractive examples can get competitive fast.
Why High-Grade 1943-S Steel Cents Matter
Collectors chase these for a few reasons:
- A very recognizable World War II composition change
- A classic set-builder target for Lincoln and wartime type sets
- Pop pressure at the top grades, where the supply thins out quickly
Collector Take: Is MS-68 Worth It?
If you are building a registry set or want one “best possible” wartime oddball, MS-68 is a defensible splurge. You are not buying metal value here. You are buying a premium example of a historically quirky issue.
If you want most of the look for less money, watch for clean, spot-free MS-65 to MS-66 pieces. They can be the practical sweet spot.
What do you think?
Do you love steel cents, or do you treat them like a science experiment that should have ended in 1943?
