Most US bills don't have stars, regardless of denomination. A star is placed next the serial number only if a bill is a printed as replacement for one that was damaged during production and before being released.
Serial numbers are used for security and record-keeping so the Treasury doesn't want gaps in the range of numbers used for a particular printing. When a bill or bills is damaged, a new set is printed with the original serial numbers but with a star replacing one of the letters.
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$10 in uncirculated condition. $2 if used.
On modern U.S. currency, the serial number starts with one or two letters, followed by eight numbers, and then one more letter. On a star note, the letter at the end is replaced with a star. This means that the original bill was damaged during production, so the star note is a replacement. Example: K60415896A compared to K60415896*
Low-denomination star notes are generally worth a dollar or two more than their standard counterparts. For a 1963 $2 U.S. Note, that would translate to $3 or $4 at retail. Note that a bill's serial number is almost never important to its value, and doesn't help to ID it.
If it's circulated, it might retail for $1.50 or so. An uncirculated one would retail for $2 or $3.
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What is a 1976 2 dollar bill with a star worth
It means that the original bill was destroyed so they made another one and put a star beside it.
$2
on my 2 dollar bill , its the picture of declaration of independence in 1776. i have a 1976 series c3,c39
Its worth about $2.
The series 1976 $2 bill is extremely common and is worth face value only.
1976
2 dollars
About $3.00
2 dollars.
No.