No. The largest circulating denomination the U.S. ever printed was $10,000, though there was also a $100,000 bill used for transactions between government offices.
No US Million dollar notes were ever issued. You have a novelty item that sells for a couple of bucks in gift shops and dollar stores. The largest US bill ever printed for circulation was $10,000, and the largest ever printed (but not circulated) was $100,000.
Not in the US. Some countries such as Zimbabwe that have their own money called dollars have issued notes of that size, but only because their dollars are worth much less than US dollars.
No, nor has a genuine million dollar bill ever been printed in any year.
1 Chinese yuan is equal 0.16 US Dollar. So 1,000,000 yuan worth about 160,000 US Dollar. Ref: alpari.com/#informer=quotes
There's never been a US "million dollar" bill. They're novelty items that you can buy in a gift shop for a few dollars.
No US Million dollar notes were ever issued. You have a novelty item that sells for a couple of bucks in gift shops and dollar stores. The largest US bill ever printed for circulation was $10,000, and the largest ever printed (but not circulated) was $100,000.
Yes
Not in the US. Some countries such as Zimbabwe that have their own money called dollars have issued notes of that size, but only because their dollars are worth much less than US dollars.
There are approximately 28 US Dollar notes in 1 Ounce.
No, nor has a genuine million dollar bill ever been printed in any year.
1 Chinese yuan is equal 0.16 US Dollar. So 1,000,000 yuan worth about 160,000 US Dollar. Ref: alpari.com/#informer=quotes
At today's exchange rate (1.48 euros/dollar), it is about 1.48 million US dollars.
The us hasn't printed a silver certificate 2 dollar bill since 1899 all twos printed after that were either US notes or federal reserve notes.
$85.
There is no one million dollar bill and never has been.
No, just special paper and ink.
There are no U.S. notes with the series date of 1921