About a dozen different countries have a currency called the 'Peso'. All of them print their own banknotes and they all look different.
The current issue Mexican 100 Peso note (Banco de Mexico on the front) is Red and brown-orange. The 15th century warrior Nezahualcoyotl is on the front-right with an Aztec figure at the centre. The back has a Mexican statue.
About 14 different countries use 'Peso' as their unit of currency and the value would depend on the age and condition, so this question is impossible to answer accurately. The 'Mil' in the value just means 1000. If the note is from Mexico and from about 1985, then a mint condition note would be worth $2 to a banknote collector. A modern, 2002 or later, Mexican 1000 Peso note in any condition is worth $78 in any bank.
A fine condition 1928 Bank of the Phillipine Island issue 200 Peso note would be worth at least $650 to a collector. An extremely fine note would fetch $1200.
It depends on how old, but the 1981/82 500 Peso note is mostly green with the name top-right of 'EL BANCO DE MEXICO' with a portrait of former president F.I. Madero on the front and an Aztec stone detail on the reverse.
The so-called "Bank Note" is another older English name for paper currency printed by your government, whether it be Euro, Pound, US Dollar or Mexican Peso.
Is the 500 argentine peso worth anything?
Mexico re-valued it's currency in 1992, with 1000 Peso becoming 1 Peso. A 500 Peso note from 1983 is therefore only worth 0.5 Peso ($0.04). A perfect mint condition uncirculated 1983 500 Peso would be worth about $4 to a collector.
No, since re-valuation in 1992, the largest denomination Mexican Peso note is the 1,000 Peso. The 50,000 Peso note was last issued in Dec 1990 with an exchange value of 1:1000 with the new Peso (about $4). Mint condition 1990 notes are worth $45 to a collector. Used condition ones are worth about $6.
You can see one by clicking on the link below:
About 14 different countries use 'Peso' as their unit of currency and the value would depend on the age and condition, so this question is impossible to answer accurately. The 'Mil' in the value just means 1000. If the note is from Mexico and from about 1985, then a mint condition note would be worth $2 to a banknote collector. A modern, 2002 or later, Mexican 1000 Peso note in any condition is worth $78 in any bank.
There is not a current Mexican 5000 Peso note. The 1985-89 issue note is worth $3-$6 in perfect uncirculated condition.
In banknote terms, the face value of the note is whatever is printed on it - so a 1 dollar note has a face value of 1 dollar. The note could be worth more or less than this, depending on both devaluation and collectability. Many of the stable "hard" currencies like US Dollar and British Pound are still valid, regardless of age - so an English banknote for 100 pounds from 1776 has a face value of 100 pounds if you take it to the bank of England - the same note, however, would be worth a fortune to a collector. The opposite is true of say a Mexican Peso from 1980 - even though the face value could be 100,000 Peso, the currency has devalued since and the note is worth only 100 Peso if you took it to a Mexican bank and it's relative newness would make it worth only slightly more to a collector.
yes