The 1957 series of silver certificates was the last printed before replacement with Federal Reserve Notes in 1963. A lot were printed and a lot were saved, so they are still fairly common in collections. In normal circulated condition, a 1957 series bill is worth at most $2 retail. If the bill is uncirculated - crisp and unfolded - it would retail for maybe double that amount. Of course, a dealer would pay less than retail, so my advice would be to go to a hobby shop, buy a plastic holder designed for bills, and simply save it as a conversation piece. Please see the Related Links for additional information.
2.00
$10.
Sorry, there is no such bill.
I would like to the current value of excellent condition of 1862 US series 268 1 dollar bill.
Check
Please see the link below. E 647 is a plate number that does not affect the bill's value.
2.00
$10.
Sorry, there is no such bill.
10.00 dollars
It's still worth one dollar.
I would like to the current value of excellent condition of 1862 US series 268 1 dollar bill.
It is worth face value unless it is uncirculated.
Face value only.
Check
What you have is a silver certificate. They used to be redeemable for $1.00 in silver bullion, back in the days when the price of silver was controlled. The 1957 series notes were the last issued before dollar bills were issued as Federal Reserve notes, so a lot were hoarded. In circulated condition your bill might be worth $1.50 to $2.00. FWIW, a bill's serial number is almost always meaningless as a factor in the note's value. There are people who collect "interesting" numbers; e.g. 00000005 or 12344321, but the others are usually ignored.
$5 to $10 in average circulated condition