Zimbabwe is the only country that has recently issued a $1 million bill, and that was due to hyperinflation. It's only worth a small amount when exchanged for the dollars issued by major countries like Canada, the US, Australia, and New Zealand.
Those countries have never issued 1 million dollar bills. In fact, $100 the highest denomination currently in use.
Some novelty companies make and sell joke bills that claim to be worth $1M but they're just that - jokes.
Not in the US. There are novelty items that look like $1,000,000 bills but they're intended as jokes.
Zimbabwe recently issued a million-dollar note but it was in Zimbabwe dollars, not US dollars, and was only worth a couple of cents.
Since it is not real, (there was never a real $1,000,000 bill in the US) it only has value as a gag or joke, so maybe five dollars?
There has never been a "real" million dollar bill. There are novelty notes with this denomination, but no genuine currency.
No.
There is no one million dollar bill in US currency.
No, it is not true that the United States has a $1 million dollar bill.
1 hundred pennies = 1 dollar 8 hundred million pennies = 8 million dollars
lonnie (1$) toonie (2$) five dollar bill ten dollar bill twenty dollar bill fifty dollar bill and the one hundred dollar bill
Zimbabwe
No. The US has never printed a 1 million dollar bill, and no US bills of any denomination are dated 1940.
1,000,000 / 100 = 10,000 hundred dollar bills in a million.
Yes it does. 100 one dollar bills is the same as one hundred dollar bill.
1 Million
100/1
A $100 bill weighs 1 gram, so $1 million in $100 bills weighs 1,000,000/100, or 10,000 grams, or 10 kilograms (kg).
It would take half a million (500,000 or 5 hundred thousand) 2 dollar bills to be worth 1 million dollars. Of course it would take a full 1 million 2 dollar bills to make a million BILLS.