Please check again and post a new question. No US bills of any denomination were dated 1968, and the last $100 silver certificates were printed in 1891.
No, The law was changed in 1968 and these bills can not be changed for silver. They are still worth the dollar value though
None. Redemption for silver metal was discontinued in 1968.
1964 was the last year they printed silver certificates, although they were dated 1957 B. Until 1968 it was possible to exchange your silver certificate for its face value in silver dollars or the equivalent in silver bullion/coins. However, since 1968 they have become fiat money and somewhat of a collector's item. They are no longer convertible for silver and can be found rarely in change.
No. Sell them for the collector value then buy silver!MoreThe government stopped redeeming silver certificates for silver metal in 1968, after the price of silver was deregulated. The collector value of a silver certificate depends on several factors, among others:> Its denomination> How worn it is> Its date> The letter, if any, next to the date> Its seal color (sometimes - usually it's blue but some bills have other colors)WikiAnswers already has specific values for most common silver certificates. Look for questions in the form "What is the value of a (date) US (amount) dollar silver certificate?"; for example "What is the value of a 1953 US 5 dollar silver certificate?"
No US silver dollars were made after 1935, look at the back of the coin for 'Half Dollar'.
If you mean turn them in for silver? you can't, June 24 1968 was the last date to redeem silver certificates.
The coin is only 40% silver and has a value of $2.73 only the 1964 Kennedy half dollar was 90% silver.
Starting in 1968, Canadian dimes, quarters, half dollars, and dollars were all made of nickel, not silver. It's worth one dollar in Canada.
The coin is a 40% silver Kennedy half dollar most are valued only for the silver, about $6.00
The US did not mint a dollar coin in 1968, therefore you don't have a 1968-D silver dollar.
It is made of 40% silver and has a melt value of about $2.50 as of 08/2008
Silver certificates can no longer be redeemed for silver. The Treasury suspended redemption back in 1968, after the metal's price had been deregulated.