Nearly all silver certificates are already worth more than face value. Depending on the bill's date, denomination, and series letter the difference can be anywhere from maybe 25 cents to many thousands of dollars.
Unfortunately the silver certificates most people encounter - 1957 and late-series 1935 $1 bills - are very common and fall at the low end of the range. These aren't likely to increase much, but older and higher-denomination silver certificates are certainly worth hanging onto.
what ever someone is willing to pay
Silver certificates were never officially demonetized so they'll always be worth at least face value.As far as their collector value, so many 1957 $1 bills were printed, and of those such a large number were saved, that their value is unlikely to increase much in the foreseeable future. In the five-plus decades since they were last issued, the value of an average-condition 1957 $1 silver certificate has gone up by all of 50¢.
No US paper money ever had silver IN it; they're all printed on special paper containing cotton and linen.My guess is that you're referring to a $1 silver certificate which is a now-obsolete kind of paper money that could be redeemed for silver metal up till the 1960s. There's more information at the Related Question.
Please check your bill again. There were no series letters on 1934 silver certificates, and no silver certificate series letters ever went as high as K. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
That's CERTIFICATE and MILLION DOLLARS, as any dictionary will tell you .... There's never been any U.S. bill with that denomination. The largest bill ever made was worth $100,000 and was only used to transfer money between banks and government departments in the days before electronic funds transfer. The largest circulation bill was worth $10,000. The largest bill today is $100.
Sorry, no Buffalo nickels were ever struck in silver.
The U.S. has never issued a $1,000,000 bill, ever. Even if it did, it would have been a gold certificate, not silver. As such, it would receive very little value, since it is fake.
About $1.25 in average condition. You don't need to copy out the serial number. It's just a counter and hardly ever helps to ID a bill.
Yes 800 is valuable as it is 80% silver is worth 80% of what ever the spot or stock market value is for 999 silver
It is the most amount of money ever for somebody to earn..
yes
Sorry no US silver 10 dollar coins were ever struck