$5 red-seal United States Notes were issued on an off from 1862 to 1963. See the page under Related Links below for a full list of dates and series letters.
Please recheck your bill. Red seal $5 were only made in 3 years, and 2003 was not one of those years.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. There were no 1925-series US bills printed. 1928 is the nearest date for a red-seal $5 bill.
The modern US five dollar bill (or note) does not have a red star on it. some older versions did carry a seal printed in red, but this would hardly be seen as a star.
Not 1965 - no $5 bills were printed with that date. Please check your bill again and post a new question.
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.
The US printed both $2 and $5 bills with red seals in the 1963 series. Please see the questions "What is the value of a 1963 US 2 dollar bill?" and "What is the value of a 1963 US 5 dollar bill?" for more information.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. Only one series of red-seal $5 bills was printed in 1963 so there are none with series letters.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. A red seal would indicate that the bill is a United States Note, but 1934 A $5 bills were printed as green-seal Federal Reserve Notes and blue-seal silver certificates. There were also yellow- and brown-seal bills with that date printed for use during WWII.
Not enough information. Most but not all $5 silver certificates were printed with blue ink, and most but not all $5 U.S. notes were printed with red ink. Please post a new question with the bill's date and what letter if any is next to the date. The serial number is not important, so you don't have to copy it.
Your 5 dollar bill only printed on one side is worthless. It is counterfeit. It was made by a copy machine.
There were 3 major types of $5 bill printed during the 1950s. Please post a new, separate question that includes: > The bill's date > What letter, if any, is next to or under the date > The seal color - green, blue, or red
The last red seal $5 bills were U.S. notes issued in 1963. If you're referring to one of the new multicolor notes, there are hundreds of millions of them printed and they are worth exactly $5. No more, no less.