The value of a $5 bill, printed in 1995 with Abraham Lincoln on it, is worth $5. A bill from 1995 is not old enough to be worth anymore than the face value.
Your 5 dollar bill only printed on one side is worthless. It is counterfeit. It was made by a copy machine.
The series 1995 $2 bill is rare compared to the number of other denominations printed that year, but it's not worth anything above face value.
$50.00
No US bill that size has ever been printed. $100,000 is the largest bill ever printed, they were only printed for less than a month from December 1934 to January 1935, and were used for internal transactions between Federal Reserve banks.The largest note for public usage was $10,000, and those have been printed since 1934. The largest note printed in 1995 was $100. No, it does not expire.
A 2001 20 dollar bill that has been printed wrong would be worth 40-50$
It's worth a few cents for the paper it's printed on, because it's not a genuine US bill - it's a well-known novelty item available online and in gift shops. There's never been a 1 million dollar bill. The largest US bill ever printed for circulation was $10,000, and the largest ever printed (but not circulated) was $100,000.
Atlanta is the seat of the US Federal Reserve district that distributed the bill, not where it was printed. Up till 1990 all US bills were printed in Washington DC. For more information about its value, please see the Related Question.
it really depends on how much the bill is off centered. IF you can see another part of a different bill then you will have additional value.
Unless it is uncirculated, any $20 bill printed since the 1970s is worth only face value.
a million dollars
There weren't any printed with that date.
This is an uncommon error that happens when a sheet of paper on which a set of bills is printed is accidentally flipped during its passes through the printing press. Retail value depends on the bill's condition and how pronounced the printing is, but it could sell for in the $300 to $500 range.