Up till 1945 the Treasury did print and issue $10,000 bills, as well as $500, $1000, and $5000 bills. The last ones were part of the 1934 series so they have that date regardless of when they actually were printed.
In an effort to combat the use of high-value bills by organized crime, President Nixon issued a 1969 order halting distribution of all denominations higher than $100 via the banking system.
High-value bills have never been formally recalled, but banks are required to keep any that they receive and send them back to the Treasury. That "soft withdrawal" process means that essentially no high-denomination bills remain in circulation today. Plus in any case it wouldn't make much sense to spend one if you do have it; except for very worn bills almost all high-denomination banknotes are worth more than their face value as collectibles.
Main requirements: Excellent credit, longterm steady verifiable employment, and a history of paying your bills on time.
As many as you want it to have in it to make it rain
The US did print 10,000 dollar bills. Since these are of a higher denomination and more scarce than 1,2,5,10 and 20 dollar bills there is a higher chance that it is a counterfeit bill. However just because there is a higher chance does not mean that it is fake. The best way to find out if it is fake is to take it to trusted and experienced collector. He or she will probably be able to tell you.
1 Ton of dollar bills is $907,184
It wouldn't make a lot of sense to deposit a $10,000 bill. A bank is only allowed to accept bills at face value, but a genuine $10,000 bill is worth at least 3 times that amount on the collectibles market. It should be verified by a currency dealer or appraiser who may purchase it or suggest an auction venue.
10000 / 20 = 500 You'd need 500 $20 bills to make $10,000.
10000 of them.
To make $10,000 using 100 dollar bills, you would need 10000/100 = 100 bills. So you would need 100 one hundred dollar bills to make $10,000.
1 million dollars/100 dollars = 10000 bills
you would need 1000 hundred dollar bills
10000/100 is 100 bills
The 10 and 10000 denominations. The 10 dollar bill has Alexander Hamilton on it and the 10000 dollar bill has Salmon P. Chase on it.
100
There is no exact record of how many 10,000 dollar bills were made before they stopped being printed in 1945.
1000
To work this out divide 1,000,000 by 100.The answer is there are 10,000 x $100 in a million dollars.
Since there are 10 dimes in a dollar, we will divide 10000 by 10 to get the amount of dollars it is, giving us 1000. Then, we will divide 1000 by 100 (because there are one hundred dollars in a one hundred dollar bill) which gives us 10. 10000 dimes is equal to 10 one hundred dollar bills.