According to the U.S. Treasury .0043 inches. A stack a mile high will give you over 14 million bills.
The .0043 inches may be the thickness of the paper it is printed on, however, I measured a representative sample of brand new banded stacks of $1, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100 bills, and found the stacks were consistently .75 inches, plus or minus .02 inches. Therefore, the thickness of the ink (intaglio printing is used) must account for the additional .0032 inches.
So, a stack 1 mile high, which equals 5,280 feet, which equals 63360 inches. Taking 63350, and dividing it by .0075 equals $8,448,000.00
.oo43
a one dollar bill is 0.0043 inches think. as long as a $5 bill and a $1 are the same thickness... 0.0043 * 25.4 (mm in an inch) = 0.10922 a Five dollar bill is approximately 0.10922 mm thick
American $100 bill :)
There is not, and never has been in American currency a million dollar bill. If you have what appears to be an American million dollar bill, it is a "novelty item", and essentially worthless.
A dollar bill weighs one gram as does any denomination of American paper money
The 100 dollar bill is the highest in circulation.
About the size of a US dollar bill about an inch thick
The one dollar bill in American currency is filled with symbols. The scales on the dollar represent the scales of justice.
All American bills of any denomination are printed on paper that is about 0.0043 inches thick, so a new bundle (Federal Reserve strap) of 100 bills will be 0.43 inch thick (1 cm).
Benjamin Franklin appears on the front of the current US $100 Dollar bill.
It's been on every American dollar bill since 1957.
According to the U.S. Treasury a dollar bill is .0043 inches thick. Therefore, a stack of 1,000 one dollar bills would be: 4.3 inches thick.