Current-issue $2 Federal Reserve Notes should be available from most larger banks. You may have to make arrangements to get them because demand is quite low in most parts of the country and not all banks keep a ready supply.
$32 would be the value. You can buy bills in sheets through the Bureau of Engraving and Printing at moneyfactory.com
No, because there are no genuine $1 million bills. All so-called "million-dollar" bills are simply novelty items that sell for a few bucks in gift shops. Anyone trying to spend one as if it were real currency is subject to prosecution. The largest denomination ever printed for circulation was $10,000.
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You can still buy uncut sheets from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. This is not an error. Value is $4.
when you buy something the money gets used to pay the workers which will go and buy something else. it will keep moving all around the country. some bills get tracked. look for a red stamp on your dollar bills. if it has one you can go online and see where its been!!
just 4 dollars
It is simple really, the more money that gets printed the less value it has. Gold is at a fixed supply, unlike the US dollar it can't be printed on demand. When there are more and more dollar bills created and no more gold is being created, it takes more of those bills to buy the same amount of gold.
Well honey, a pound of fifty dollar bills is worth exactly the same as a pound of one dollar bills - $453.60. Money doesn't discriminate based on denomination when it comes to weight. So if you're looking to lift some cash, just remember it's gonna weigh the same no matter the bill.
The "paper" in US dollar bills is actually made from cotton and linen - there is no wood pulp in it at all. It is produced by one manufacturer (Crane & Company of Dalton, Massachusetts) exclusively for the United States Treasury (so you can't buy the blank paper and try to make your own money at home!).
Oh, dude, you're really making me do math right now? Alright, fine. There are 500,000 two-dollar bills in a million dollars. So, like, if you ever come across a cool mill in two-dollar bills, just know you're holding half a million of those bad boys.
$2. Go to your local bank and buy a stack of two dollar bills. You'll probably find 3 or 4 out of every hundred.
Yes, but you'd have to buy it from a dealer or collector. The last $500 bills were printed in the 1940s, and the Federal Reserve System stopped supplying them to banks in 1969.