
Master Copper in Minecraft - Mining, Crafting & Oxidation
Copper is one of the most interesting materials in modern Minecraft. It's not essential for survival, but it opens up a ton of building possibilities and serves a few crucial technical functions. Added back in 1.17, copper has slowly become a staple for both decoration and redstone-adjacent contraptions.
Where to Find Copper Ore
Copper spawns throughout the Overworld between Y-levels -16 and 112, with peak concentrations around Y 48. It's fairly common once you start mining at the right depths, so you won't need to search desperately. I usually find plenty while branch mining for other ores.
Every biome has copper ore, but you'll see it more frequently near water (coastlines, rivers, lake beds). Caves are your friend here. When exploring the Nether for other materials, remember you can also use our Nether Portal Calculator to plan your coordinates if you're building multiple bases.
Mining and Smelting Copper
You need a Stone pickaxe or better to mine copper ore. Any higher tier works. What you get is Raw Copper, not copper ingots directly. This was changed in 1.17 and honestly makes the progression feel a bit more intentional.
To turn raw copper into usable ingots, smelt it in a furnace, blast furnace, or smoker. One raw copper becomes one ingot. Simple. From there, you can craft it into various blocks and items.
- 9 Copper Ingots = 1 Copper Block
- 3 Copper Ingots + 2 Sticks = 1 Lightning Rod
- 3 Copper Ingots = 1 Copper Grate
The Main Uses for Copper
Lightning Rods are the star of the show. Place one on top of your house or building and it'll attract lightning strikes, preventing the structure from catching fire. Genuinely useful if you're dealing with thunderstorms. I've had entire wooden builds saved by putting these on top.
Beyond that, copper is mostly decorative. Copper Blocks, Stairs, Slabs, and Grates all look fantastic and add a warm, industrial vibe to builds. The color and patina changes make them visually interesting without being jarring. On our server list at minecraft.how, plenty of multiplayer communities are incorporating copper architecture into their spawn areas and towns.
Copper Bells are functional too. Hit them with anything and they emit a pleasant chime that players can hear from a distance. Not game-changing, but nice for signaling teammates on servers. If you're running a community server and want to check your voting status, the Minecraft Votifier Tester helps verify server voting functionality is working properly.
Understanding Copper Oxidation
Here's where copper gets interesting. Unlike most blocks, copper oxidizes over time. It doesn't happen instantly. Copper Blocks go through five stages:
- Fresh Copper (shiny orange)
- Exposed Copper (duller orange)
- Weathered Copper (cyan-ish)
- Oxidized Copper (teal/turquoise)
- Fully Oxidized (green patina, like real-world copper roofs)
The transition takes time, and it varies. Each stage lasts around 50-80 Minecraft days in-game, roughly speaking. This applies to all copper blocks, stairs, slabs, grates, and doors. Honestly, I think the oxidation looks cool. The aged green patina gives builds real character if you let it develop naturally.
Controlling Oxidation with Wax
If you want to keep copper fresh and shiny forever, use honeycomb. Craft it from bee nests, then right-click (or equivalent on Bedrock) a copper block while holding honeycomb. That block is now waxed and won't oxidize further.
You can wax copper at any oxidation stage. Fully oxidized blocks look gorgeous when waxed, keeping that teal color permanently. Mix waxed and unwaxed copper blocks for visual variety. Some builders do half-waxed builds where the left side is fresh and the right side fully oxidized.
Want to reverse oxidation? Axe. Hit an oxidized block with an axe and it strips one oxidation stage, reverting to the previous color. Takes a few swings to go from fully oxidized back to fresh, but it's possible. And this mechanic gives you total control over the look.
Copper in Practice
I tested copper heavily on my SMP when 1.17 dropped, and the real value is in mixing oxidation states for aesthetic purposes. Lightning Rods are genuinely functional for survival builds, but the decorative applications are where most players find creative potential. Factory builds, steampunk themes, ancient temples, industrial zones. Copper fits naturally into all of them.
One last thought: copper is cheap to obtain in bulk. Mining for 20 minutes gets you stacks of raw copper. This means you can experiment freely without worrying about resource scarcity, which is one reason why newer versions of Minecraft feel more creative-friendly.
Lead writer at minecraft.how. Long-time Minecraft player running a small SMP server, testing every build, mod, and seed before writing about it.


