You can't, because it's not real. It's a novelty item sold in gift shops and similar places.
Yes ... but it's not a REAL certificate. It's a novelty item that sells for a couple of dollars.
The answer is easy - ALL "one million dollar" or "one billion dollar" bills are fake. They're novelty items you can buy in a gift shop or online for a few dollars. $1000 is the largest-denomination silver certificate ever printed. $10,000 is the largest bill ever printed for circulation. $100,000 is the largest bill ever printed, but these were never circulated.
I assume you're referring to a $1 note since that's the only denomination of silver certificate series bearing that date. If circulated, it might be worth 2 or 3 dollars.
Retail is 5 to 10 dollars depending on how worn it is
The only dollar coins that sell for over $1M are 1804 dollars.
Not since 1967.
It's a novelty item worth roughly the value of the paper it's printed on.
a million dollars in dollar bills weights 6160 lbs. look it up. 3350 lbs for silver 65 lbs for gold
Well not many of them.
A silver certificate is paper currency. It is not a coin. No silver dollars were minted in 1943, and no silver certificates were printed with that date either.
Nowhere, unfortunately. Unless it has a spectacular printing error, NO 1957 $1 silver certificate is worth more than a few dollars.
Fifteen dollars
2-9 dollars.
About six dollars
There never was such a thing as a million dollar bill.
Silver certificates were unique to the U.S. They haven't been printed since the 1950s.
These sell in internet auctions for less than 2 dollars.