Even though your bills have the phrase "redeemable in gold" on them they're Federal Reserve Notes rather than gold notes. $10 gold certificates were also printed in the 1928 series but they don't have any series letters.
1928 A $10 FRNs are definitely worth more than 1928 B bills, but the difference depends on the issuing Federal Reserve Bank letter. Please see the questions "What is the value of a 1928 A US 10 dollar bill?" and " ... 1928 B ... " for more information.
This is a Federal Reserve note and should have a green seal. They are worth $22-$30 in circulated condition and $40 or more in uncirculated condition.
The highest series letter ever used on a $20 bill was E, in the 1950 series. Please check again and post a new question that includes the bill's date and seal color.
There is no ñJî series bill. The series letter is next to the date and corresponds to the Treasury Secretary and/or Treasurer who where in office when the bill was printed. The ñJî is almost certainly the Federal Reserve Bank Indicator letter. The face value of the bill would be $140 depending on the condition of the bill.
Bills printed in 1969 or later are only worth face value unless they are uncirculated. Note that a bill's serial number isn't an identifying feature. What matters is the date, any series letter next to the date, and sometimes the Federal Reserve district letter.
In novelty shops, yes. In genuine currency, no.First, the largest bill ever printed was worth $100,000 and was used only for transferring money between government departments. The largest circulating bill was worth $10,000 and only a very few were ever issued or used.Second, there isn't now and never was anything called a "Federal Reserve Bond", just Federal Reserve Notes. That discrepancy alone indicates any such bill is joke item and not a real banknote.
An A series in avg.condition is worth around $12.50.
it is worth about 4.2millon
That L indicates a Federal Reserve bank branch. The series 2003 $2 bill is worth $2.
L is the Federal Reserve district letter. The series letter is next to the date, and will either be not present, or an A.
The 1934 100-dollar bills ended with Series D. A note in good condition, with little wear can be worth about $140.
if these are Crisp-Uncirculated Federal Reserve notes they retail up to $150 depending on series, condition and issue.
The J is not a series letter, it is the code for the issuing Federal Reserve district. The series letter (if any) is located next to the date. If there is no series letter, or A through D, your bill is worth face value to $22. A dealer will pay face only. If the series letter is E, it could be worth $40 to $60.
"G" is the Federal Reserve District letter rather than the series letter; if there is one it's next to the date. The fact that your bill is a Federal Reserve Note means it was printed in 1976 or later and is not rare. If you got it in change it's only worth face value.
This is a Federal Reserve note and should have a green seal. They are worth $22-$30 in circulated condition and $40 or more in uncirculated condition.
You didn't specify the bill's denomination, but most bills printed in the 1960s and later are only worth face value.
The highest series letter ever used on a $20 bill was E, in the 1950 series. Please check again and post a new question that includes the bill's date and seal color.
Only one series of 1976 $2 bills was printed, so none of them would have a series letter. A series letter is always next to (below or to the right) of the date. If the "D" is in the Federal Reserve Seal, it's the indicator letter for the Federal Reserve Bank that distributed the bill. In any case, in average condition the bill is only worth face value. If it's uncirculated it might retail for $3-$4.