Yes.
Red seals were standard on United States Notes for all denominations. Please check your bill's denomination and see one of the following for more information: "What is the value of a 1963 US 2 dollar bill with a red seal?" "What is the value of a 1963 US 5 dollar bill with a red seal?"
All $1 bills dated 1963 and later are Federal Reserve Notes with green seals. Despite its age, a 1963 $1 bill is common among collectors. As of 03/2015 it retails for about $1.25 to $1.50 in average condition.
All 1963 U.S. $1 bills are Federal Reserve notes with green seals. Red-seal $2 and $5 U.S. notes were printed in 1963 . These are worth face value or slightly more, at most around 10%.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question.> The last red-seal notes were $100 bills dated 1966.> All $2 bills printed since 1976 have green seals.> No US bills were printed with a 1983 date.If your bill's date is actually 1963, there's more information the at question "What is the value of a 1963 US 2 dollar bill?".
Please check again and post a new question. No $2 bills were printed with the 1957 series date, only $1 bills with blue seals. The nearest dates for $2 bills are 1953 and 1963; these all had red seals.
There's no such bill. The last blue-seal silver certificates were $1 bills dated 1957 B. The US only printed blue seal $2 bills in 1899 and 1918. All other $2 bills after that had red seals (up till 1963) or green seals (1976 to the present).
its aproximently worth 4,562,000 us dollars
Please check your bill and post a new, separate question. The US didn't print any $2 bills dated 1957. The closest dates are 1953 and 1963. All 1957 bills were $1 silver certificates with blue seals.
Please check your bill again. It's almost certainly a ONE dollar silver certificate - there's more information at the Related Question. From 1928 to 1963, all US $2 bills were printed as United States Notes and had red seals. In addition, there weren't any $2 bills printed with a 1935 date.
All $2 bills printed in 1963 were United States Notes with red seals. Any other color could be the result of > Accidentally running the bill through a washing machine where detergent reacted with the bill's ink > A poor attempt at copying the bill > Outright counterfeiting, although almost no one tries to counterfeit low-value bills. Normally circulated 1963 U.S. Notes are only worth face value anyway, so if your bill is damaged or fake you really haven't lost very much.
All 1963 US $5 bills had either green or red seals. If your bill says United States Note across the top it should have a red seal, so my guess is that something (being left in a washing machine, age, etc.) caused the ink to change color. Please see the Related Question for more information.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. > All 1963 US $2 bills were red-seal United States Notes > Blue seals were only used on silver certificates starting in 1928 > The last silver certificated were 1957 $1 bills > The last $2 silver certificated were printed in 1899.