The denomination of any and all Dollar notes is One Dollar.
Prior to their withdrawal, the One Dollar note was the smallest Australian bank note in circulation. Currently, the Five Dollar is the smallest denomination bank note.
No, the size of U.S. dollar notes varies depending on the denomination. The higher the denomination, the larger the physical size of the note.
A 100 dollar note is the largest.
Yes, the 100 dollar denomination was changed for security and was NOT demonetized. As long as that note is not counterfeit it if valid.
The largest denomination in the Bahamas is baptist *OR* The largest denomination in the Bahamas is the 100 dollar note with a picture of Queen Elizabeth II on the front.
A denomination is needed. Please look for questions in the form "What is the value of a 1928 A US [denomination] dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for specific information.
please refer Is_there_a_bill_worth_one_million_dollars_in_US_currencybefore answering...First, there is no such thing as a US $1,000,000 note; the highest denomination of US currency ever printed was $100,000. However, if you own a novelty bill of that denomination, you can sell it provided you're not representing it as real.
The approximate weight of a note, regardless of denomination is (1) one gram.
No. The highest denomination New Zealand banknote is the One Hundred Dollar note. For large amounts bank or personal cheques tend to be used, or account transfers made.
The highest denomination of New Zealand banknote is currently the One Hundred Dollar note. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has no plans to introduce a Two Hundred Dollar banknote in the foreseeable future.
Some currency experts consider the first federally-issued $1000 bill to be an interest-bearing note printed in 1861 to help finance the Civil War. The first true federal note of that denomination, though, was a United States Note issued the next year, 1862.
The largest denomination of currency the US prints today is the $100 bill.