No, though it did exist at one time.
Yes, old 100 bills issued by the U.S. government are still valid currency and can be used for transactions.
not anymore. most people saved the 2 dollar bills like ethel.
There are no U.S. dollar bills dated 1994, but all U.S. currency from the 1990s is still legal tender at face value.
Yes, the US dollar 2013 series is still considered valid currency and can be used for transactions.
Yes!
Yes, old dollar bills issued by the U.S. Treasury remain valid for use in transactions as long as they are in good condition and not counterfeit.
Yes. All US Dollar banknotes issued since 1861 are still valid.
Very definitely! It's a valid denomination of US currency and can be spent the same as any other paper money.Regardless of popular misconceptions, $2 bills have neverbeen discontinued or withdrawn, nor are there plans to do so. The Treasury continues to print them as needed; the most recent series started in 2013.$2 bills only make up about 1% of all bills in circulation but that's still hundreds of millions of bills over the years. They may be uncommon but they're definitely not rare.
You cannot. There is no one million dollar bill in the United States. If you want you can convert any valid US dollar note which is a legal tender like the $10, $20, $50, $100 etc. which are valid and they can be converted to Indian rupees in almost any large bank in India.
No. The U.S. has never printed a $1 million dollar bill. What you have is a novelty, and it's not worth anything.
All valid paper currency will be accepted by a bank, regardless of age. The bank will consider paper currency invalid if it is counterfeit, been declared invalid by the government (this has been done in some countries for old currency when redefining their entire money system), the government that issued the paper currency no longer exists (e.g. Confederate States of America), it is privately printed paper currency and the bank is outside the jurisdiction of the private agency that printed it (e.g. currency printed by a town for local use only, company scrip to pay employees of that company and valid at company operated stores and banks only), etc. But even severely damaged valid paper currency will be considered valid by a bank following an inspection to determine how much is actually present, even if no intact notes still exist (e.g. a bundle of bills was burned leaving just the lower left corners of the bills identifiable).
The euro is valid in Madeira.