The star next to the serial number on a US $100 bill (or any US bill, for that matter) means that it is a replacement bill. In the dollar bill production process, 32 bills are printed on a single sheet (4 bills by 8 bills). The sheets are stacked 100 high and then cut, resulting in 32 stacks of 100 bills each (with the last two digits in order from "00" through "99"). Each sheet is inspected, however, before being added to the stack to be cut - should an error be found, the sheet is destroyed and a sheet of "star bills" is inserted in its place (so as not to foul up the count).
One dollar.
Believe it or not, it's worth exactly one dollar.
generally a star on a currency serial number means it has been reprinted. first one probably an error
One dollar -
If it's circulated, it might retail for $1.50 or so. An uncirculated one would retail for $2 or $3.
a as in a one-hundred dollar bill
There are no nickels inside a one hundred dollar bill, nor is there any nickel material in the bill. A one hundred dollar bill has the same monetary value as 2000 nickels.
one hundred dollars is equal to twenty times five dollars, but there are NO five dollar bills in a hundred dollar bill.
one hundred dollar bill and two dollar bill
Value of 1963 one dollar star note
The One Hundred Dollar Bill - 1911 was released on: USA: 4 August 1911
There is no hundred thousand dollar bill. The highest denomination currently in use in US currency is the one hundred dollar bill. There was, at one time, a one hundred thousand dollar "bill", but it was used only for transactions between branches of the federal government and never issued for general use. It featured Woodrow Wilson.
One dollar.
A circulated 1950 D one-hundred dollar bill is worth about $140. If the bill was not in circulation, it can have a value of about $175.
One
Yes it does. 100 one dollar bills is the same as one hundred dollar bill.
one hundred Canadian dollars