1945 Lincoln Wheat Cent
Base
About This Coin
The 1945 Lincoln Wheat Cent is a United States cent from the Lincoln Wheat Cents 1909-1958 series — 37th of 50 years in the series. In 1945, coins were struck at the Denver and San Francisco Mints with a combined mintage of 1.5 billion. This ranks 47th of 50 years by total mintage, above the series median of 350.9 million. The obverse features Abraham Lincoln facing right, the first real person depicted on a U.S. circulating coin and the reverse displays two wheat stalks framing ONE CENT, symbolizing American agriculture. Produced during World War II, when the Mint altered coin compositions to conserve strategic metals for the war effort. Struck in 95% copper, 5% zinc, weighing 3.11 grams, 19 mm in diameter, with a plain edge. Collectors have cataloged 314 known die varieties for this date across 11 categories, including atypical die clash, bie die break cent, cud and 8 other types. Across its variants, estimated values range from $0 to $3 depending on mint mark, grade, and strike type. A notable auction result reached $5.0K in PCGS Genuine grade at eBay. Designed by Victor David Brenner.
Value Estimates
Values as of May 2026 — range across all strike types, reflecting typical grades (G-4 through MS-63). Coins in lower or exceptional grades may fall outside this range.

