Paper money errors of this sort are definitely worth more than face value. I can't find a reference for this specific error so I don't want to guess at a price, but related misprints can retail for over $100.
I'd advise finding a couple of dealers or appraisers who deal in currency errors and get some estimates. Don't take the first one offered till you have a competing bid.
Your 5 dollar bill only printed on one side is worthless. It is counterfeit. It was made by a copy machine.
Bills printed in 1969 and later are only worth face value.
Unless it is uncirculated, any $20 bill printed since the 1970s is worth only face value.
Face value only. It's too new and too many were printed for it to carry a premium.
Face value only. It's too new and too many were printed for it to carry a premium.
The U.S. never printed any $1 bills with that date. In any case, all $1 bills printed from 1969 to the present are only worth face value.
$20 bills from the 1990s onward were printed in such large numbers that they're only worth face value.
There have not been any $3 bills printed. Anything that looks like a modern US bill but says "$3" is a novelty item worth only the paper it's printed on.
There are many varieties of US $20 bills that have brown seals, but only two types were printed in the 20th century - the 1929 series of National Currency Notes and the 1934 series of wartime currency printed for use in Hawaii.Please see the questionsWhat is the value of a 1934 US 20 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?What is the value of a 1929 US 20 dollar bill?
No more than face value - there were many thousands printed. The only exception is if there is something 'wrong' with it - like a misprint, or a design flaw.
Ihave a ten dollar bill that is only printed2/3 on both sides and was told it isn't worth much, but wait it was someone from this web.
If it was printed in the last couple of years then it is only worth a few dollars over face value if you can find someone who needs it.