1945
$500 bills were printed at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington. The denomination was discontinued in 1945. All U.S. currency was printed there till the Fort Worth printing facility was opened in the 1980s.
It doesn't cost the Mint anything because the Mint makes coins, not bills. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing prints bills. Anyway, the new purple and gray bills cost about 4 cents each to produce.
I think it went on there when when started printing bills out ( I don't think it should be on their, we got more than one religion in the United Sates)
The last bills with denominations higher than $100 were printed in 1945, but they carried a series date 1934.
Printing of $10000 bills was suspended by the Treasury due to low use. The president is rarely involved in decisions about what denominations should or should not be produced.
Yes, but the government stopped printing them in the 1940s.
There are 500 - 100 dollar bills in fifty thousand.
No
You need ten $100.00 bills to get a thousand dollars.
It looks like ten thousand one hundred dollar bills. Or does it look like twenty thousand fifty dollar bills? I can never remember.
1337
One thousand
It would take one hundred thousand dollar bills to make one hundred thousand dollars.
According to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 45% of all U.S. currency printed are one-dollar bills.
you need a million thousand dollars bills to equal a billion dollars.
4.3 inches
100 $20 bills