Yes, but the only way you can see one is to visit the Smithsonian Institution.
About 42,000 $100,000 bills were printed in 1934 and 1935. They were never intended for circulation, and were used to move large amounts of money inside the Federal Reserve System in the days before electronic funds transfers. When they became obsolete most were destroyed, with a very small number saved for museums and archives. They were never legal tender outside of the Federal Reserve System so private citizens can't buy or sell them.
The bills were issued only as Gold Certificates. Woodrow Wilson's image was shown on the obverse, while its reverse contained the "100,000" denomination printed in several places in orange- or gold-colored ink.
No real US million dollar bills
The US made 100,000 dollar bills, but none of these were ever in circulation. They were made to be used between Federal Reserve Banks.
100000 us dollar
4.3 inches, most heist movies make it seem like it would fill up a briefcase and such but it doesn't. In 20 dollar bills it is 21.5 inches, in 10 dollar bills it is 43 inches, in 5 dollar bills it is 86 inches, and in 1 dollar bills it is 430 inches. A dollar bill is .0043 inches so in turn to make a stack a mile long it would takeover 14 million bills.
No. The US has never printed a $3 bill. Any such thing is only a novelty.
There is no such thing as a $1Million dollar bill in US currency. There are some countries that have 1 Million unit bills.
Three dollar bills exist but they were never issued by the US government, although the US issued a three dollar coin from 1854 to 1889. Earlier, some colonies printed three dollar bills. When banks were allowed to print money in the early days of the US, some printed legitimate, legal three dollar bills. The Confederacy also produced three dollar bills.
The US never printed a million-dollar note. There are novelty items that look like $1,000,000 bills but they're intended as jokes.
If its date is 1997 it's a fake. There are no genuine US $1 bills dated 1997.
The only real person ever depicted on a US $1 bill is George Washington.
No. US one dollar bills were not made in 1950.
Sources differ but the most commonly quoted number is 42,000, of which only about two dozen were retained. The bills were never put into general circulation and were only used for transactions between government departments.