2,041 Pounds
1 million one dollar bills would be about 3,000 feet.
One million dollars in ten-dollar bills would weigh 220.5 pounds. It would make a continuous stack almost 36 feet tall, or it could be rearranged into a cube with 18-foot sides. You can get more cash dimensions and cash size and weight conversions at http://www.cashdimensions.com/
17 million one-dollar bills would stack to about 6,091.67 feet high.
A stack of 10 million one-dollar bills would be approximately 358.5 feet tall. This calculation is based on the thickness of a single bill, which is about 0.0043 inches. Since there are 10 million bills, the total thickness would be around 43,000 inches, or about 3,583 feet.
One million 1-dollar bills would be about 358.33 feet tall.
About 3 million feet.
A million dollar bills stacked would be approximately 4,300 feet tall. This is based on the thickness of a single bill, which is about 0.0043 inches. Therefore, if you stack 1 million bills, the height would exceed that of most tall buildings, making it an impressive and visually striking amount.
It would need about two cubic feet.
To determine the volume of 5 million dollars in $100 bills, first note that there are 50,000 $100 bills in that amount. A standard $100 bill measures approximately 6.14 inches by 2.61 inches and is about 0.0043 inches thick. When stacked, the total height of the 50,000 bills would be around 8,400 inches, which translates to about 700 feet. The volume can be calculated as the area of the stack times the thickness, resulting in roughly 0.74 cubic feet for the bills themselves.
Approximately 358.33 feet tall.
10,000To put that into perspective, think of banded bundles of $100 bills you see in suitcases or duffel bags on T.V or in movies. You would need 10,000 bills to total 1 million dollars, which if stacked, would be a little over 3 feet high.
It weighs sixteen million pounds, is 180 feet tall, and takes up two million cubic feet of space.