First off, you have to identify the the bill as a "silver certificate" (blue treasury seal) or a "united states note" (red treasury seal) and then determine its condition. it is more likely a silver certificate which was the primary circulating $1 notes of series 1928. You will also need to check for a letter after the series (A,B,C,D, or E). Series 1928, 1928A, and 1928B were printed in the hundreds of millions to billions of notes and were the most common. The 1928C, 1928D, and 1928E are much scarcer and much more valuable. The united states notes of the $1 denomination were printed and released primarily in 1 major area where they would not cause much confusion. They were mainly issued in Puerto Rico in the late 1940s. Unless the note was put away as a keepsake or just forgotten somewhere, it is most likely well circulated and has a value with a small premium over face value. However even well worn specimens of 1928C, 1928D, and 1928E have a high collector premium attached to them. The same with any $1 united states note. Now, if the serial number begins with a "star" and not a letter, the value for even worn specimens skyrockets above a non-star note. A $1 united states note with a star is extremely scarce and worth many thousands of dollars, whereas a worn 1928A silver certificate is worth only 5 or 10 dollars. Good luck - I hope its red and a star! Hope this helps.
what is the value of a 1953 two dollar bill with a red seal
45.00
1928 $50 bills weren't issued as silver certificates. Please check the wording across your bill's top front; then see one of the following questions:"What is the value of a 1928 US 50 dollar Federal Reserve Note?""What is the value of a 1928 US 50 dollar gold certificate?"
A 1928 $2 bill, series D is only worth about $38 today. This varies depending on who you are selling to and what condition it is in.
$65 to $100 if circulated, somewhat over $300 if uncirculated.
what is the value of a 1953 two dollar bill with a red seal
45.00
"F" is the highest series letter for 1928 $5 red-seal notes. Please check your bill again and see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US 5 dollar bill with a red seal?" for more information.
Please check your bill again. There were no 1926 US bills; the date is most likely 1928.If so, there's more information the at question "What is the value of a 1928 G US 2 dollar bill?".
The green seal indicates that your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. All 1928 B $20 bills were printed as FRNs. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1928 B US 20 dollar bill?" for more information.
The exact value of a 1928 red seal two dollar bill would actually depend on a number of factors. Most importantly, the condition of the bill.
the serial number does not match the series
The exact value of a 1928 red seal two dollar bill would actually depend on a number of factors. Most importantly, the condition of the bill.
About $5 retail.
Please check the bill's date - it should be 1928, and its type - it should be a United States Note.There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1928 C US 2 dollar bill?".
The green seal indicates that your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see "What is the value of a 1928 D US 5 dollar Federal Reserve note?" for more information.
Please check again and post a new question. No $2 bills are dated 1929.If your bill's date is 1928, there's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1928 [letter] US 2 dollar bill?"