This depends on the condition. If it is circulated, likely face value ($1). If uncirculated anywhere from 3 to 10 dollars or so
About $3.
Star notes are bills that were printed to reuse the serial number of a bill that was damaged during printing. There is a community of star note collectors who will pay extra for these bills, but they tend to be worth only a few dollars more than their normal counterparts. Depending on the bill's condition, a circulated non-star 1963 $5 U.S. note sells for face value to $7 so I would not expect to value a similar star note at more than $8 to $10. If it's uncirculated, its value could be over $20.
30-40 dollars more than the face value
Mint condition uncirculated...$6,000.00
Hi..first you must make sure there are no folds since they are hard to see sometimes.You have to move the note at an angle in front a good light source to see if there are any folds.Any folds no matter how light lower the value.If it is a Federal Reserve Note and not a star in the serial number a retail value of $18-$20 range.Any folds and the value would be a few dollars over face at best.*i did not type this*
Value of 1963 one dollar star note
i like money
There were no 2003 Australian Ten Dollar star notes issued.
100 dollars
Low-denomination star notes are generally worth a dollar or two more than their standard counterparts. For a 1963 $2 U.S. Note, that would translate to $3 or $4 at retail. Note that a bill's serial number is almost never important to its value, and doesn't help to ID it.
About $3.
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depending on the condition, ≈$5~10
Face value. Star notes are used to replace individual notes on a sheet that are spoiled in printing, and are fairly common.
$100.00, UNLESS YOUR A COLLECTOR IT THEN MAY BE WORTH MORE TO THAT PERSON.
The selling price for a five dollar star note is 12.00 to 14.00 dollar.
$10 in uncirculated condition. $2 if used.