Unless your bill is in brand-new condition, its retail value as a collectible is only around $1.50 so you would probably not be able to sell it for more than face value or $1.25. If the bill is in uncirculated condition it might retail for all of $2 to $5. In that case you might find a private collector who'd be interested, but these bills were both printed and saved in huge numbers. They're so commonly available among banknote collectors that finding an interested person would probably take more effort than you'd make in profit.
if the seal is blue then yes. it's a silver certificate.
what is the value of a 1953 two dollar bill with a red seal
There is no such thing as a real million dollar bill, the largest dollar bill is a $100000 note, a gold seal note to be exact. However, there are pranks bills that are a "million dollars"
5 Dollars
If your bill has the words National Currency on it along with a blue seal, it could retail for $60 to $90 depending on how worn it is. In VG the value is $110, it goes up from there.
These are very common among collectors and sell for about $1.25
Please check your bill again. It's a $1 bill; the blue seal indicates it's a silver certificate. There's more information at the Related Question.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. Only $1 bills were printed with the 1957 date and they were blue-seal silver certificates.
It is worth about $1.25 to $1.50.
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the 1957 series. Please see the Related Question for more information.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. No US bills are dated 1937. 1935 and 1957 are the closest dates for blue-seal $1 bills
What is the worth of a red seal 2 dollar bill
Please check your bill and post a new, separate question. The US didn't print any bills dated 1965, and the last blue-seal $1 bills were in the 1957 series.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. There were no 1957 $5 bills, only $1 bills, and they all have blue seals.
circulated = $1.50nice uncirculated = $6.00
as with all things collectable, the condition is the most important factor in determining value. What's the condition of your blue seal and is there a letter following the date(1957) ?? Approx. $2-$6 no letter following date, but the series of the bill is F70193047A does this help the letter is F on the left hand side of the date
Please check your bill again and post a new question. A blue seal bill would be a silver certificate; the last $5 silver certificates were dated 1953 and the last silver certificates of any type were 1957-B $1 bills.