Historically, the "star" notes are released into the money supply to take the place of notes that are found to be defective after printing (and destroyed). These place-holder notes maintain the count of notes in a given serial number range. Star notes are considerably more scarce for any given series date than are ordinary notes. But not all will command a premium value above the face value of the bill.
The serial number on a dollar bill and other currency refers to the note series, and the Federal Reserve bank that issued the note. The serial number is used to keep track of currency.
$20
The value of a five dollar bill is five dollars. It's not clear what you mean by "consecutive serial numbers." If you mean that the bill's serial number looks like "12345678" or something, then a collector might be willing to pay a small premium for it as a curiosity. If you mean that you have two or more five dollar bills where the serial numbers are consecutive, they're worth five dollars each, period.
The value is more dependent on the year (series) of the bill. The serial number by itself isn't enough information.
$20.00
This is the serial number. Each bill has a unique serial number that identifies it.
Yes there are 100 dollar bill with repeated serial number it has a little star in the end of the number
You can look up a two dollar bill, but if you mean specific as in serial number, you are the only one that possesses that specific two dollar bill with that certain serial number.
Depends on year and how low the serial number is.
yes
The serial number on a dollar bill and other currency refers to the note series, and the Federal Reserve bank that issued the note. The serial number is used to keep track of currency.
No you Ding-dong!
The percentage of a partial bill really has little to do with its value. Any bill is worth its face value if it contains a complete serial number and any part of the other serial number.
The serial number and most times the letter on the bill.
$20
$20
$10