Is It Illegal to Melt/Destroy US Pennies and Other Coins? | Make it From Metal (2024)

If you skim through the comments of nearly any YouTube “make a ring from a quarter” or mokume gane type of video, you’ll see mindnumbing arguments back and forth on whether the content is illegal since it’s technically destroying US money. Let’s settle this.

Is it illegal to melt or destroy US pennies or other coins? It is not illegal to melt, form, destroy, or otherwise modify US coins, including pennies, unless the objective is fraudulent or with the intent of selling the raw materials of the coins for profit. Projects that use coins as materials are entirely legal in the United States.

Now as with anything US-law related, there’s a bit more to it. In this post, I’ll share the exact legal references to qualify that statement, as well as examples of what would be legal/illegal.

Table of Contents

What the Law States

According to Cornell Law School’s copy of US law:

82.1 Prohibitions.
Except as specifically authorized by the Secretary of the Treasury (or designee) or as otherwise provided in this part, no person shall export, melt, or treat:
(a) Any 5-cent coin of the United States; or
(b) Any one-cent coin of the United States.

Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Title 31, Subtitle B, Chapter 1, Part 82, Section 82.1

Ok, so as we can see here, this is focused on pennies and nickels. This says pretty clearly that you can’t melt down either of these coins. However….

Section 82.2 of that law lists the exceptions. Here’s the one of interest:

(b)The prohibition contained in§ 82.1against the treatment of 5-cent coins and one-cent coins shall not apply to the treatment of these coins for educational, amusem*nt, novelty, jewelry, and similar purposes as long as the volumes treated and the nature of the treatment makes it clear that such treatment is not intended as a means by which to profit solely from the value of the metal content of the coins.

Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Title 31, Subtitle B, Chapter 1, Part 82, Section 82.2

According to this, those “squash a penny into an oval” machines that you see at state parks and other attractions are legal after all.

So, in a nutshell, you’re in the clear if you’re doing it for fun, jewelry, or other types of crafts and projects. You’ll notice that there’s a very specific bit of wording in that law, though.

“Profiting Solely from the Value of the Metal Content”

Let me explain what this means.

The point here is that you can’t profit solely from the value of the metal content of the coins. If you’re making some kind of jewelry or trinket and selling them, you’re profiting from the combination of the material as well as the labor or anything else that went into making that piece of jewelry. In other words, it’s A-OK.

What is illegal is if you get a whole pile of coins, melt them down, and sell the bullion as scrap metal. Why on earth would someone do this, you ask?

Because, on very rare occasions, you could make a sweet profit.

For example, in 2011 the American economy wasn’t doing so great. The nickel was actually worth less than the metal used to make it. Technically, you could collect a truckload of nickels, melt them all down, and sell them for a profit.

Obviously, this would be pretty annoying for the US Mint. That’s why there’s this law about not melting down the low-value coins. Once people catch on and start up new scrap metal businesses, there would be a financial strain on the US government to make new coins. It would cost them more than they’d get.

This has actually been a common problem in history. As soon as the the materials of a coin are higher than the coin itself, people are quick to melt down and cash in.

If you’re caught with an underground coins-for-scrap business, you could face $10k in fines and up to 5 years in prison.

Fun fact: You’re not legally permitted to take more than $5 worth of pennies and nickels out of the US at a time. This prevents people from offshoring the devious scrap metal business.

What “The Other” Law States

Ok, so there’s another US law that comes into play here.

Whoever fraudulently alters, defaces, mutilates, impairs, diminishes, falsifies, scales, or lightens any of the coins coined at the mints of theUnited States, or any foreign coins which are by law made current or are in actual use or circulation as money within theUnited States; or
Whoever fraudulently possesses, passes, utters, publishes, or sells, or attempts to pass, utter, publish, or sell, or brings into theUnited States, any such coin, knowing the same to be altered, defaced, mutilated, impaired, diminished, falsified, scaled, or lightened—
Shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.

US Code, Title 18, Part 1, Chapter 17, Section 331

This is one that’s very commonly cited all over the web…. but incompletely.

The word that most people tend to omit is “fraudulently”. It’s an important word.

Essentially, defacing, mutilating, diminshing, etc is only against the law when it’s fraudulent. So if you’re not trying to commit fraud (like you’re trying to make a penny look like a dime and use it as currency) then you’re in the clear.

Making a ring out of a quarter doesn’t really strike me as an effort to commit fraud.

Other Coins

There’s not actually much to say here. The other common kinds of US coins are unlikely to ever be worth less that the metal they’re made from. The only coins specifically mentioned by law are the penny and the nickel.

That means that quarters, dimes, etc are totally fine for you to massacre in any way you please for your nefarious projects.

Non-US Coins

Every country has different laws, so don’t expect that you can legally use coins from other countries in your projects.

For example, Singapore views their money as more than just currency; it’s also their art and culture. It’s illegal to modify any of their currency. This is kind of interesting, especially since Etsy is full of Singaporean coin jewelry.

Mind you, if you’re making Singaporean coin jewelry from a secret hideout on US soil, you probably don’t have to look over your shoulder too carefully. But if you’re caught doing this in Singapore, you could be fined up to $2k USD.

The point is, traveling around the world with foreign currency jewelry might not be the best of ideas. It’s pretty unlikely that they’ll hunt you down internationally and throw you into a third world dungeon, though.

For all this other stuff, though, mutilate away!

Is It Illegal to Melt/Destroy US Pennies and Other Coins? | Make it From Metal (2024)

FAQs

Is It Illegal to Melt/Destroy US Pennies and Other Coins? | Make it From Metal? ›

It's only illegal to melt down cents and nickels for their metal content. Pre 1965 US 90% silver coins and the 40% clad silver coins from 1965 up are OK to melt. You could also melt down US gold but as a rule they are worth more on the market as coins than as metal.

Is it legal to make things out of pennies? ›

If you are defacing pennies with the intent to make them unfit to be reissued, then you are breaking the law. On the other hand, if you are enameling pennies for artistic purposes and have no intention of making them unfit to be reissued, then you are not breaking the law.

Why are melting regulations imposed on pennies and nickels? ›

The purpose of this regulation is to protect 5-cent and one-cent coins in circulation from being the subject of recycling and speculation in order to ensure that sufficient quantities of the coins remain in circulation to meet the needs of the United States.

Is it illegal to destroy U.S. pennies? ›

18 U.S. Code section 331: This statute addresses the mutilation, diminution, or falsification of U.S. coins. You can be charged with on offense for fraudulently defacing coins, mutilating coins, altering coins, diminishing them, impairing them, scaling them, or lightening them.

Why are smashed pennies legal? ›

According to statute 18 USC Section 331 , in brief, it's illegal to mutilate coins with the intent to use them fraudulently, but since pressed pennies are made as souvenirs with no intent to pass them off as currency, they get the green light.

Are pennies going to be banned? ›

The U.S. Mint has no plans to discontinue the penny, and such a move would require congressional approval. However, the “Penny Debate” continues in the United States, with pro- and anti-penny advocates both making some pretty solid points in their arguments.

Why should the U.S. keep making pennies? ›

Those who favor keeping the penny believe the penny plays an important role in keeping down the costs of the goods and services we buy. If there were no pennies, stores and restaurants would round up to the nearest nickel. This means consumers would end up paying $0.55 for something that should cost only $0.51.

How much is a nickel worth when melted? ›

At $100,000 a ton, a nickel, composed of 25% nickel and 75% copper, is worth about 16 cents in metal, or “melt” value, Barron's estimates. Each nickel weighs five grams—appropriately so—and contains 1.25 grams of nickel and 3.75 grams of copper.

Is it illegal to carve on a penny? ›

18 U.S.C. 331 makes it illegal to “alter, deface, mutilate, impair, diminish, falsify, scale, or lighten” any coin minted in the U.S. or any foreign coin being used as currency in the U.S.

Can you pay for things with pennies? ›

The federal law, Coinage Act of 1965, says that coins and cash are “legal tender for all debts, public charges, taxes, and dues.” However, the federal government is not going to tell you what you will or will not accept for payments. Your private business does not have to take all types of legal tender.

Is it legal to make a floor out of pennies? ›

Is it legal to make a floor or other project from pennies? It's absolutely legal to use pennies as a building material, or indeed for any other purpose for which you could lawfully use a plain disc of copper-clad zinc (other than to melt them down to recover the metal therein).

Can I still turn in pennies? ›

You may not like what you're about to learn: pennies are still legal tender. That means you can still use them at stores, and you can still deposit them at the bank.

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