Neither the US nor Canada EVER printed a $1,000,000 note. There are loads of novelty items available in gift shops for a couple of dollars, that's all.
Recently the African country of Zimbabwe did print a million-dollar note but it was denominated in Zimbabwean dollars. Due to hyperinflation its value at the time was only a couple of US cents, and it's now worthless except as a curiosity.
no
Any 1 million US Dollar note is worthless other than as a curiosity. The largest denomination is circulation is $100. The largest ever circulated is $100,000.
$1 what more can you expect from a $1 note?
35 million rupees
If you are saying you have a 1 Million dollar US Bill from 1996, then, no it is not real
It is worth exactly one Australian dollar, unless the note is somehow rarer or worth more to a collector.
Your 1 Million Drachma Greek inflationary note has very little value -- they were printed like wallpaper -- perhaps a dollar from an interested buyer.
The US never printed a million-dollar note. There are novelty items that look like $1,000,000 bills but they're intended as jokes.
Nonexistent. There has never been a 1 million Dollar Federal Reserve Note.
A couple of bucks in a novelty store. The US has never printed a genuine $1 million note, but there are loads of "joke" fantasy bills available.
The 1 million Australian dollar does not exist and cannot be used as medium of exchange. The highest denomination in banknotes for Australia is the $100 note which was released in 1984.
The value of this rare note depends greatly on its condition and the location of issue.