A bills are just over 1/10 mm thick. Since it would take one hundred $100 bills to equal $10,000 it would take a stack at least 100 x 1/10 = 10mm = 1 cm high to equal $10,000. Of course the bills won't really sit completely flat so you would expect the stack to be a bit more than 1 cm thick.
The numbers will be similar for other currencies
The $1 and $100 bill (under normal compression) are about 0.0043 inches thick, or just over 1/10 mm.A stack of ten thousand bills would be 43 inches (1.1 m) or 3 feet, 7 inches tall.
A standard bundle of 100 U.S. dollar bills is typically about 0.43 inches thick, or approximately 1.1 centimeters. This measurement can vary slightly depending on factors such as the condition of the bills and how tightly they are bundled. Each bill is about 0.0043 inches thick, so the thickness of the bundle is a direct result of the accumulation of these individual bills.
no, they currently print bills up to $100, but the following bills were circulated as late as 1969: $500, $1000, $10000 & $100000
About $23,255.00Each US bill is 0.0043 inch thick.
10000
10000/100 is 100 bills
1 million dollars/100 dollars = 10000 bills
A bundle of $100 bills typically contains 100 notes. Therefore, in a bundle of 10,000 $100 bills, there would be 10,000 divided by 100, which equals 100 bundles. Each bundle would contain 100 $100 bills, making a total of 10,000 $100 bills.
you would need 1000 hundred dollar bills
1000
10000 of them.
The $1 and $100 bill (under normal compression) are about 0.0043 inches thick, or just over 1/10 mm.A stack of ten thousand bills would be 43 inches (1.1 m) or 3 feet, 7 inches tall.
Each bill is .0043 inches thick. 2000 dollars in twenties, which is 100 bills, is only .43 inches thick.
A bills are just over 1/10 mm thick. Since it would take one hundred $100 bills to equal $10,000 it would take a stack at least 100 x 1/10 = 10mm = 1 cm high to equal $10,000. Of course the bills won't really sit completely flat so you would expect the stack to be a bit more than 1 cm thick. The numbers will be similar for other currencies
A stack of 100 U.S. dollar bills is approximately 0.43 inches (about 1.1 centimeters) thick. This measurement can vary slightly based on the condition and the way the bills are stacked. Generally, each bill is about 0.0043 inches thick, so multiplying that by 100 gives you the total thickness.
To make $10,000 using 100 dollar bills, you would need 10000/100 = 100 bills. So you would need 100 one hundred dollar bills to make $10,000.
To work this out divide 1,000,000 by 100.The answer is there are 10,000 x $100 in a million dollars.