Depends on year condition etc.
The value of a 1957 one dollar silver certificate with a star varies depending on its condition and rarity. In general, these notes can range in value from around $1.50 to $25 or more to a collector. It's best to have it professionally appraised to get an accurate assessment of its worth.
The value of a 1957 silver certificate star note can vary depending on its condition, rarity, and demand among collectors. In general, these notes can be worth between $20 to $100 or more, with particularly rare or well-preserved specimens fetching higher prices at auction. It is recommended to have the note appraised by a professional or consult a currency collecting guide for a more accurate valuation.
A star note is any US bill, not just a silver certificate, that has a star instead of a letter at the start or end of its serial number. Star notes are printed to replace a bill that had a defect and was destroyed. Because bills are printed in large groups it's impractical to reprint specific serial numbers. Instead, a new set of serial numbers is started and a star is added to indicate that these notes are replacements. Collectors generally prefer star notes and it may make the bill be worth a bit more.
It's difficult to say without knowing its date and serial number, but $1 star notes are generally only worth a dollar or so above their standard-numbered counterparts. Assuming you have a 1935 or 1957 series bill, in poor condition it would be unlikely to sell for more than face value without a star, so you might figure on only $1.50 to $2.00 retail for your note, and face value for a wholesale price.
You could probably get one dollar for it.
Please look at the bill more carefully. It's a Federal Reserve Note, not a silver certificate.
It is worth ≈ $10
It's a U.S. Note rather than a silver certificate. It's worth face value if circulated, $3 if uncirculated.
Post a new question and include the date and condition of the note you are referring to.
if not a star note, then depending on condition, 30-100. if a star note, then 75-900.
Very common if it's not a crisp note maybe 2 bucks
Please check the wording on your bill. It's a United States Note, not a silver certificate.
If the bearer can redeem the note into silver metal, I would guess it is worth the going price of silver on the day the bearer exchanges it or sells the metal.
The last silver certificates were worth $1 and dated 1957.If you have a Federal Reserve Note with that date, it's worth about $22 in circulated condition. A dealer will pay you face value.
It's a common note, currently worth $2 to $3 depending on condition.
The 1957 silver certificate was only issued in $1 denomination. An uncirculated mint condition note is worth $10. (Fine condition = $2).
The most valuable silver certificate has to be the 1880 $100 note. Even a well-worn example is worth over $4,000 -- and a nice crisp uncirculated one could easily be worth over $100,000