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a mint condition silver certificate is worth $5-$6.
There were no $100 silver certificates printed during the 20th century.If your question is missing a decimal point and you're referring to a $1.00 SC, please see the Related Question for more information.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. As indicated by both its green seal and the banner over Franklin's portrait your bill is a Federal Reserve Note, not a silver certificate. The last $100 silver certificates were dated 1891. See the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. The last $100 silver certificates were printed back in 1891. The red seal and banner reading "UNITED STATES NOTE" at the top of your bill indicate it's a US Note rather than a silver certificate. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1966 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
Please check again. The only silver certificates dated 1957 were $1, not $100.
a mint condition silver certificate is worth $5-$6.
There were no $100 silver certificates printed during the 20th century.If your question is missing a decimal point and you're referring to a $1.00 SC, please see the Related Question for more information.
The US never printed 100 dollar silver certificates with this date.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. As indicated by both its green seal and the banner over Franklin's portrait your bill is a Federal Reserve Note, not a silver certificate. The last $100 silver certificates were dated 1891. See the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. The last $100 silver certificates were printed back in 1891. The red seal and banner reading "UNITED STATES NOTE" at the top of your bill indicate it's a US Note rather than a silver certificate. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1966 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
The U.S. didn't print any $100 silver certificates with that date. See the related question linked below for more information.
Please check again. The only silver certificates dated 1957 were $1, not $100.
Please check again and post a new question. No US $100 bills are dated 2000, and the last $100 silver certificates were printed in 1891.
It's a novelty item worth roughly the value of the paper it's printed on.
Please don't assume that because a bill is old it has to be a silver certificate. As the banner across the top and green seal indicate, your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. See the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
1928-series $100 bills weren't issued as silver certificates, only gold certificates and Federal Reserve Notes. Please look at the bill's front to determine which you have; then check one of the following: "What is the value of a 1928 US 100 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" "What is the value of a 1928 US 100 dollar gold certificate?"
Please don't assume that just because a bill is old it must be a silver certificate. The 1963 series of $100 bills were only printed as green-seal Federal Reserve Notes, and the last silver certificates were $1 bills dated 1957. There's more information the at question "What is the value of a 1963 US 100 dollar bill?".