If the Bureau of Printing and Engraving make an error in the printing of a banknote, the note has to be replaced. Any replacement notes are marked with a small star at the end of the serial number. Because these are reasonably rare, a perfect mint condition uncirculated 1999 $20 note would be worth about $60 instead of $30 for a standard note without the star. A worn, creased note that has been used is only worth its face value of $20.
"Star" notes are replacements for defective bills discovered during the printing process. They're not terribly rare; about five million $2 star notes in the 2013 series were printed. A "star note" may be worth a small premium to a collector, but $2 bills are unpopular and not widely circulated. You can take the bill to a dealer or collector and ask if you want to be certain, but a realistic valuation of your $2 star note is $2.
Most star notes are not rare, although some are worth a bit more than their ordinary counterparts. Star notes are bills that are printed to replace others that were damaged during production and therefore not delivered to banks. The name "star note" is given because they have special serial numbers with an asterisk rather than a letter as the last character. The asterisk lets them be easily identified as replacement notes.
The selling price for a five dollar star note is 12.00 to 14.00 dollar.
It means the note is a replacement note, usually to correcy a printing error. This star does not mean the note is worth any more than the denomination printed on it
not rare at all they are counterfeit broski
you look at the bottom right corner and if it has a circle its common, if it has a dimond its 50 rare and 50 not. if it has a black star its rare, silver star rare RARE, and gold star RARE RARE RARE! also if they are a lv ex thy are rare
It is not particularly rare. A recent Blackbook lists values from $4.50 to $60 depending on condition. A star note in uncirculated goes to $550. == ==
circle=common diamond=uncommon star=rare shiny star=extremly rare circle=common diamond=uncommon star=rare shiny star=extremly rare
If the Bureau of Printing and Engraving make an error in the printing of a banknote, the note has to be replaced. Any replacement notes are marked with a small star at the end of the serial number. Because these are reasonably rare, a perfect mint condition uncirculated 1999 $20 note would be worth about $60 instead of $30 for a standard note without the star. A worn, creased note that has been used is only worth its face value of $20.
In circulated condition, $5 to $10Uncirculated, $35 and up.Dan MooreThe Working Man's Rare Coinshttp://www.workingmancoins.com
"Star" notes are replacements for defective bills discovered during the printing process. They're not terribly rare; about five million $2 star notes in the 2013 series were printed. A "star note" may be worth a small premium to a collector, but $2 bills are unpopular and not widely circulated. You can take the bill to a dealer or collector and ask if you want to be certain, but a realistic valuation of your $2 star note is $2.
Latias star is very rare there are only 2 more known still in packs i have one!
Depends on the date and condition. In general star notes carry a small premium if they're in decent condition. If the series itself is rare (and modern 50s are not) a star note can be worth a lot more than face value."Star" notes are issued to replace notes that were damaged during production. The following is from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing's website:"When an imperfect note is detected during the manufacturing process after the serial number has been overprinted, it must be replaced with a new note. A "star" note is used to replace the imperfect note. Reusing that exact serial number to replace the imperfect note is costly and time consuming. The "star" note has its own special serial number followed by a star in place of a suffix letter. The serial number of the imperfect note that was removed is not used again in the same numbering sequence."
Oddie is an Ultra-Rare moshling on Moshi Monsters.088 Oddie the Sweet Ringy Thingy [Foodies] Yellow Star Blossom, Black Star Blossom, Purple Star Blossom
Most star notes are not rare, although some are worth a bit more than their ordinary counterparts. Star notes are bills that are printed to replace others that were damaged during production and therefore not delivered to banks. The name "star note" is given because they have special serial numbers with an asterisk rather than a letter as the last character. The asterisk lets them be easily identified as replacement notes.
snookums is not rare you just have to plant 3 star blossums