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Face value only.
20 times $50 equals $1,000. Consecutive serial numbers will only add to the value if they're old bills.
i have a ten dollar bill, serial number jh13001355a. is this bill of any value more than face? tu
Please post a new question with the bill's date. Serial numbers rarely affect a bill's value. Also, U.S. bills have their serial numbers on the front. If your bill is from a different country include that in your post.
Two dollars. Just tell your bank cashier you want some new bills and if she has a new bundle, she'll count out up to 100 bills in sequential order.
Face value only.
The blue seals indicate your bills are silver certificates. In circulated condition the consecutive serial numbers add only a small amount to their normal $8 to $10 retail value.
There is no such thing as a "Morgan $2 bill". George T. Morgan designed coins, not bills. Most red seal $2 bills are worth only a few dollars above face value, although they can retail for higher prices if in uncirculated condtion. Given that situation, sequential serial numbers add little or nothing to their value.
20 times $50 equals $1,000. Consecutive serial numbers will only add to the value if they're old bills.
i have a ten dollar bill, serial number jh13001355a. is this bill of any value more than face? tu
About $6 to $8. BTW, you don't need to post bills' serial numbers. They almost never affect a bill's value.
In general, they have no added value.
20 dollars each
Very definitely. For security and bookkeeping reasons, the Treasury doesn't skip over serial numbers of bills that are damaged during production. Instead, a new set of replacement bills is printed with serial numbers that have the same digits as the damaged ones, but with the last letter replaced by a star. That way all serial numbers are accounted for, in sequence with no gaps. Star notes are worth more than regular bills, depending on their denomination. So many $1 bills are printed that star notes are relatively common in that denomination. On the other hand, high-denomination star notes can be worth a significant fraction more than the value of a comparable standard bill.
Please post a new question with the bill's date. Serial numbers rarely affect a bill's value. Also, U.S. bills have their serial numbers on the front. If your bill is from a different country include that in your post.
Please post a new, separate question with the bill's date and what letter, if any, is next to the date. As you can see from the bills in your wallet, all US bills have serial numbers. They're counters and a security feature but rarely affect a bill's value. Some collectors will pay extra for numbers with a special pattern, e.g. 12345678, or low numbers such as 00000015.
The U.S. did not print any $2 bills with that date.