A bill's serial number does not generally affect its value.
Please post a new question with the bill's date, seal color, and whether there is a small letter next to the date. Those are the most important factors.
About $25. If there is a star in the serial number, about $40.
The US did not print any two dollar silver certificates after 1899.
At the least, $2
There were no series letters on 1899 $2 silver certificates. Please see the question "What is the value of an 1899 US 2 dollar silver certificate" for values and other information.
More information is needed because blue-seal silver certificates were issued for many decades and in different denominations. Please check your bill's date and denomination, then look for questions in the form ""What is the value of a [date] US [denomination] dollar silver certificate?"; e.g. "What is the value of a 1953 US 10 dollar silver certificate?"
Sorry but five bucks not too rare
About $9 - $10 if it is in uncirculated condition.
8.95
in good condition, 3-5$
the certificate K57481719A worth 1 dollar of silver this mean about 1 tenth of an ounce at a spot price of 10$/ounce the certificate should have been used before since with inflation 1 dollar buy alot less silver then it used to buy in 1899
B27233123A
ABOUT 10.00 on eBay less shipping
Please be more specific. Post a new question with the date, denomination, and condition of the bill. The serial number is not needed because this does not influence the value.
A star in a serial number on any U.S. banknote indicates that the original bill with that number was damaged, and the star note is the replacement.
Please check again and post a new question. All 1935 $1 silver certificates have blue seals.
The U.S. did not issue any $1 silver certificates dated 1953.
Silver certificates don't always have a letter in the beginning of the serial number. They can have a star. Otherwise they all have letters.