Approximately 358.33 feet tall.
Five feet
It depends on how many dollar bills you have! Lacking that variable, one US dollar is 0.0043 inches thick. So, a stack of one million dollars is about 358 feet four inches high.
8.6"
Approximately 67.866 miles high if they are in pristine condition.
Approximately $22,900
All US paper money is 0.11 mm thick. Multiplying by a million simply involves moving the decimal point 6 places to the right, so the stack would be 110000 mm high. There are 1000 mm in a meter so converting to a more useful unit, the stack is 110 m high, or about the height of a 40-story building.
17 million one-dollar bills would stack to about 6,091.67 feet high.
100 dollar bills would stack 44 inch high
It depends on how many dollar bills you have! Lacking that variable, one US dollar is 0.0043 inches thick. So, a stack of one million dollars is about 358 feet four inches high.
One million 1-dollar bills would be about 358.33 feet tall.
A one-inch stack would contain about 233 bills.
mad high son
First we need to see how many stacks of $100 dollar bills go in $1 million. So $1000000/100 = 10000 stacks. If each stack is 1 inch then the pile will be 10000 inches high. Since 1 foot = 12 inches this will be 833.3 feet high (1 decimal place)
According to the U.S. Treasury, 0043 inches. A stack a mile high will give you over 14 million bills.
8.6"
195 100-dollar bills would be 0.84 inches tall.
Very high: about 67.87 miles.
Extremely high: 5,157,828.28 miles.