No, the largest denomination issued was the $100,000 note.
Depending on how "circulated" it is, it's worth between 25 cents and $3. Since it was circulating in the earlier years of the Vietnam war, though, it's definitely a cool keepsake item.
How much is a 20 thousand dollllar bill from Vietnam worth in USAUSA
When you are looking to see if you have a fake $100 bill, you can check for the piece of paper in the tail of the bill. When you hold the bill up to a light, you should see a slender piece of paper in it.
The same as it does anywhere else. (I tried to interpret this as generously as possible, but sorry, that's it. The Vietnamese currency is the dong, so "50 dollars" is not a valid denomination for a Vietnamese bill.)
1 Dong = $.00005, so $5.
1 US Dollar = 18,906.80 Vietnamese Dong
Vietnamese Dong ₫1000 = Philippine Pesos ₱2.01Vietnamese Dong ₫1 = Philippine Peso ₱0.00201 ₫1000 x ₱0.00201/ ₫1= ₱2.01
"Ngan Hang Quoc Gia Viet Nam" is Vietnamese for "National Bank of Viet Nam". The wording was used on the coinage (and, presumably, paper money) of the Republic of Viet Nam (South Viet Nam). As there was no South Vietnamese coin with a denomination of "1000", I presume that you are refering to a 1000 Dong bill from South Viet Nam. While I know enough to know that its value would depend at least somewhat on its condition, I do not know what the range would be, nor whether there were multiple issues of 1000 Dong bills.
No, the largest denomination issued was the $100,000 note.
Piasters were the primary South Vietnamese currency during the Vietnam War. And US MPC (Military Payment Certificates/and US Greenbacks were blackmarket at the time) were always preferred by the Vietnamese nationals when dealing with GIs. Any monies by any other name are stangers to the Vietnam War.
Depending on how "circulated" it is, it's worth between 25 cents and $3. Since it was circulating in the earlier years of the Vietnam war, though, it's definitely a cool keepsake item.
salmon p chase
5 dollars\
The largest bill ever printed in the U.S. was worth $100,000 and it never circulated in normal commerce.
turkish 5000000 still valid or not?
No you Ding-dong!