☕️The End of the US Penny | Learn English with Morning Brew newsletters

After 232 years, the US Mint stopped issuing new pennies on November 12, 2025. The decision was made because the cost of minting a single penny rose to 3.69 cents, making it too expensive to produce. While new production has halted, existing pennies remain in circulation and are still valid currency. The nickel faces a similar dilemma and may be next to go.

💡 Expression Spotlight

1. Cost a pretty penny

  • Definition: To be very expensive.
  • Context: Alex mentions that making pennies was “costing a pretty penny” because the production cost was higher than the value of the coin.
  • Example: “That vintage car looks amazing, but I bet it cost a pretty penny to restore.”

2. Churn out

  • Definition: To produce large quantities of something mechanically and quickly (often implying a lack of care or focus on quantity over quality).
  • Context: Maya explains that the Mint costs nearly four cents just to “churn out” a single penny.
  • Example: “The factory churns out thousands of smartphones every single day.”

3. Legal tender

  • Definition: Official money (coins or banknotes) that must be accepted for payment by law.
  • Context: Alex asks if his old pennies are still valid, and Maya confirms they are still “legal tender”.
  • Example: “Shop owners are required to accept cash because it is legal tender.”

4. On the chopping block

  • Definition: In a position where one is likely to be fired, removed, or eliminated.
  • Context: The nickel is also losing money (costing nine cents to make), so it might be next “on the chopping block”.
  • Origin: Refers to a butcher’s block or an executioner’s block—implying something is about to be cut.
  • Example: “Due to the company’s low profits, the marketing department is on the chopping block.”

5. A penny for your thoughts

  • Definition: A friendly way to ask someone what they are thinking.
  • Context: Alex uses this idiom to ask Maya if she will actually miss the heavy coins.
  • Nuance: This is warm and personal, best used with friends or partners when they are quiet.
  • Example: “You look so serious. A penny for your thoughts?

📝 Dialogue Script

Maya: Did you hear the news? The US Mint officially stopped making pennies after 232 years.

Alex: It makes sense. Honestly, manufacturing them was costing a pretty penny.

Maya: Seriously. I read it costs nearly four cents just to churn out a single one-cent coin.

Alex: That is wild. So, wait, are the coins in my pocket still legal tender?

Maya: Yes, you can still spend them. But the nickel might be next on the chopping block.

Alex: I’m not surprised. With inflation, small coins are just less useful these days.

Maya: Exactly. Most people just use digital payments instead of cash anyway.

Alex: Well, a penny for your thoughts—will you actually miss carrying around all that heavy change?


🧠 Quiz Answer

Question: How much does it cost the US government to make one penny?

Answer: 3.69 cents (almost 4 cents). The cost of zinc and copper has risen so much that the government loses money on every penny it makes.

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