$200 to $300 depending on condition.
What is the difference in a 2004 twenty dollar bill and a 2004A twenty dollar bill?
The bill could be counterfeit, or if real, several hundred dollars.
there are two (i think) differences. one is that in the serial number, the first letter is different. in 2004, it is E. in 2004A, it is F. The other difference is that the treasurer of the united states is different. in 2004, it is Marin, 2004A, is Cabral.
It's normal. There are two pressings of the 2004 $20 note, the 2004 and the 2004A. The $50 is the same.
Unless it's uncirculated, it's worth the same as all of the millions of other 2004A $10 bills in circulation - ten dollars.
Yes. It's worth 20 dollars.
If you mean the series number, there were several valid series of US dollar bills in that time frame. Specifically:Series 1999Series 2001Series 2003Series 2003ASeries 2006There were also Series 2004, 2004A, and 2006A, but those were only issued in some denominations ($20 and $50 notes for 2004; $10, $20, and $50 notes for 2004A; $100 notes for 2006A). There was also a Series 2009, but I'm not sure that those were actually released IN 2009.
2004A is the series of bill. The year is updated when either the bill's design is changed or there's a new Treasury Secretary. When there's a letter following the date, that means that there is a new U.S. Treasurer.
It's worth face value only, as there have been millions and millions printed. Go ahead and spend it.
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$20. Your bill is an ordinary Series 2004A US $20 bill, which was issued in enormous quantities.The wording and numbers on the bill are common to all modern US currency:GF69776355A is a serial number. Serial numbers are counters and a security feature but rarely affect a bill's value or help to ID it. Some collectors will pay extra for numbers with a special pattern, e.g. 12345678, or low numbers such as 00000015.J10 is the code for the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank that requested and distributed the billJohn W. Snow was the US Treasury Secretary at that time; his signature is reproduced on all bills in the series.FWe27 and E4 indicate where the bill was located in the large plate that's used to print multiple bills at one time. "FW" is interesting because it means the bill was printed at the BEP's Fort Worth facility.
Series letters are handled a bit strangely, and sometimes inconsistently. The first bill in a particular date's series normally does not have any letter, the second one is A, the third is B, and so on.In general the letter is added or changed when a new treasurer is appointed, and a new date series is started when a new Secretary of the Treasury is named or a new design is adopted*.So, the lack of a series letter simply means your bill was from the first run of 1957 silver certificates, before there was a change of treasurers. The A227 is nothing more than a printing plate identifier and doesn't affect the bill's value.If you check the bills in your wallet you should find plenty of more recent ones that don't have series letters either, so the lack of a letter on your 1957 bill should not be a surprise.(*) That's not always the case, though - for example the new orange $10s involved a design change plus a new Treasury Secretary, so there was never a 2004 bill, only 2004A.