Yes ... but it's not a REAL certificate. It's a novelty item that sells for a couple of dollars.
All 1923 $10 bills were issued as United States Notes, not silver certificates. Please see the generic question "What is the value of a 1923 US 10 dollar bill?" for more information.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The last US $100 silver certificates were dated 1891, and no $100 bills were printed in 1923.
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.
Take it to a US currency collector.
A couple of bucks in the novelty shop that sold it - it's a joke item. The highest-value US bill ever put into circulation was $10,000, and the highest value US bill ever printed was a special $100,000 gold certificate used only for government transactions. In fact, in 1923 a hundred million dollars would have been a substantial fraction of the country's budget so printing bills with that value would have been absurd on the face of it.
The only bill fitting that description is a silver certificate. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1923 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
...the face value is $1.
The only bill fitting that description is a silver certificate. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1923 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
I don't believe that there is no 1000000 silver certificate issued by the US in world war 11. my grand father was awarded a 2 1000000 dollars silver certificate after he captured 30 Japanese. If it is not true then i would say that the US military officer at that time are all liars. They just deceived my grand father by giving a fake money bill which in fact my lolo keep it until he died. We just until now that we the heir of this bill wanted to used it for good. Blood and strength was his capital in fighting the enemies but you says it is fake. I will prove to you that it is really true that there is a 1000000 dollars silver certificate.
All 1923 $10 bills were issued as United States Notes, not silver certificates. Please see the generic question "What is the value of a 1923 US 10 dollar bill?" for more information.
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1923 US 1 dollar silver certificate?".
The US printed two types of bills with that date. Silver Certificates have blue seals and the words SILVER CERTIFICATE on them; US Notes have red seals and the words UNITED STATES NOTE.Depending on which you have, please see one of the following questions for more information:What is the value of a 1923 US 1 dollar silver certificate?What is the value of a 1923 1 dollar US Note?
Current retail is $6 to $35 depending on how worn it is.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The last US $100 silver certificates were dated 1891, and no $100 bills were printed in 1923.
well-worn = $20 lightly worn = $40 crisp uncirculated = $60
You shouldn't "cash in" a collectible bill. To cash in a bill means to take it to a bank where you'll only get face value (i.e. $1) for it. As you can see from the Related Question linked below, a 1923 $1 silver certificate would be worth much more to a collector or at auction.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question.The last US $2 silver certificates were dated 1899.There were no $2 bills of any type dated 1923.