Depending on the year, a great amount surely. You should do your homework before attempting to sell this dollar bill, you will no doubt be ripped off otherwise. Some errors I've seen are going for between $200 - $6000 depending on the year of course and condition.
A one dollar bill with the face printed on both sides would not hold any additional monetary value. It would still have a face value of one dollar since the value of a bill is determined by the denomination printed on it, regardless of any printing errors.
The value would be 0$ because there in our monetary systems, there can't be 2 copies of the same bill...
Ihave a ten dollar bill that is only printed2/3 on both sides and was told it isn't worth much, but wait it was someone from this web.
$50.00
A 2001 20 dollar bill that has been printed wrong would be worth 40-50$
Bills printed in 1969 and later are only worth face value.
There were so many of these printed that in circulated condition its value is a dollar or less.
If it's a copy, it's not worth anything.
The U.S. never printed any $1 bills with that date. In any case, all $1 bills printed from 1969 to the present are only worth face value.
A 10-dollar bill that was printed in 1934 is worth little more than 10 dollars. Depending on the series, it may be worth around 15 dollars.
Unless it is uncirculated, any $20 bill printed since the 1970s is worth only face value.
$20 bills from the 1990s onward were printed in such large numbers that they're only worth face value.
1.00 the phrase is printed on all dollars so it is a normal dollar.
The last silver certificates were printed with the date 1957. All green-seal dollar bills are worth face value only, unless they're uncirculated.