'Face value' means the amount printed on the note (bill). Therefore the answer is 5,000 dollars. If you have been given this question the way you write it, it was a trick question.
In perfect uncirculated condition, a 1995 $5 US Dollar note is worth $10. In any other quality, it is worth face value ($5).
None, because the US never printed a million-dollar note. There are novelty items that look like $1,000,000 bills but they're intended as jokes.
if you mean New Zealand then Sir Edmand Hillary was on the five dollar note
a lot like 1,000 dollar
Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States.
Mary Reibey and John Flynn. http://cafe.naver.com/aussieschool
President Andrew Jackson. Note that all current American bills have captions on them identifying the person pictured on the front and the scene or building on the back!
The portrait of the first President of the United States of America, George Washington, appears on the front of the US $1 Dollar note.
The first dollar bill, a United States Note released in 1862, had a picture of then secretary of the treasury, Salmon P. Chase on it.
sherea
Australian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a building).Bahamian five dollar note: Obverse: Sir Cecil Wallace-Whitfield. Reverse: (no face; a building).Bahraini five dollar note: Obverse: Sir Frank Worrell. Reverse: (no face; a building).Belize five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; several mixed images).Bermudian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; several buildings).Brunei five dollar note: Obverse: Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah. Reverse: (no face; rainforest).Canadian five dollar note (1954 series): Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Otter Falls).Canadian five dollar note (1969 series, 1986 series, 2001 series): Obverse: Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Reverse: (no face; a boat, a kingfisher and children playing ice hockey, repsectively).Cayman Islands five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a schooner).East Carribean five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; a building).Fijian five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Nadi International Airport).Guyanese five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of bank, Kaieteur Falls). Reverse: (no face; sugar harvesting and wheat processing scenes).Hong Kong five dollar coin (pre1980 series): Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: (no face; Royal Emblem of Hong Kong/value).Jamaican five dollar note: Obverse: Norman Manley. Reverse: (no face; coat of arms of Jamaica).Liberian five dollar note: no information found in research. Please insert information as appropriate should you find it.Namibian five dollar coin: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of Namibia). Reverse: (no face; eagle or hawk).New Zealand five dollar note: Obverse: Queen Elizabeth II. Reverse: Sir Edmund Hillary.Singaporean five dollar note: President Yusof bin Ishak. Reverse: (no face; Garden City).Solomon Islands five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; coat of arms of Solomon Islands). Reverse: (no face; a wooden hut).Surinamese five dollar note: Obverse: (no face; a building). Reverse: (no face; a river and palm tree).Taiwanese new five dollarUnited States five dollar note: Obverse: Abraham Lincoln. Reverse: (no face; Lincoln Memorial).The Cook Islands dollar has no five dollar denomination in either coin or note. The Kiribati dollar has no denomination of its own above the $2 coind, and Australian notes are circulated.
No. The highest-value note ever made was the $100,000 bill. It had a picture of Woodrow Wilson on it.
The latest 5 dollar note features Queen Elizabeth II.
he appears on the five dollar note
BoBo165 is the king
The first dollar bill, a United States Note released in 1862, had a picture of then secretary of the treasury, Salmon P. Chase on it.