You can exchange small bills for large bills at a bank or financial institution.
You can exchange large bills for small bills at a bank, credit union, or currency exchange.
The U.S. no longer prints any bills larger than $100. Larger denominations since removed from circulation were for $500, $1,000, $5,000, and $10,000. There was also such a thing as a $100,000 bill, but that was for large payments between government agencies rather than public use. There is not currently, nor has there ever been a U.S. $1,000,000 bill.
You can exchange singles for large bills at a bank or a currency exchange service.
It is actually better to pay off other bills with higher interest rates. Paying off bills will raise your FICO credit score, which will open new doors.
No 1932-series US bills of any denomination were printed, in large part due to the Great Depression.
The first federally-issued $2 bills were printed in 1862. The denomination is still being printed, but not in large quantities. As of this writing the most recent printing was in 2012, although the bills carry a 2009 series date.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1925. Please check again and post a new question that includes the bill's denomination. The nearest dates are 1923 (large size bills) and 1928 (small size bills).
You can exchange small bills for large bills at a bank or financial institution.
The last U.S. $500 bills were printed in the 1934 series, which was issued up till 1945. In 1969 a government order was issued that banks no longer had to distribute large-denomination bills. The reason was that they were being used in organized crime to hide large transactions.
You can exchange large bills for small bills at a bank, credit union, or currency exchange.
Production of high denomination bills was stopped in 1945 and distribution was stopped in 1969 because there was very little demand for them at the time. Since then inflation has eroded purchasing power to the point that some higher-denomination bills could be justified in ordinary commerce, but the government is reluctant to print them because they could also be used to easily transfer large amounts of money for criminal activities. By forcing large-value transactions to be made electronically or to use lots of smaller bills, it's easier to track illegal purchases.
Today you'd have to purchase one from a dealer or banknote collector. In July 1969 President Nixon ordered banks to distribute only bills with values of $100 or less as a way to stop the use of large-denomination bills by organized crime.
Yes, $1,000 bills did exist in the United States, but they were discontinued in 1969. These large-denomination bills were primarily used for transactions between banks rather than for general public circulation. While they are no longer in production, they are still legal tender and can be collected, often fetching high prices among numismatists.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The last $10 bills with a red seal were large-size notes printed in the 1923 series, and no US bills of any denomination are dated 1952.
Rome never used 1000 dollar bills for currency, seeing as how the Dollar is a particularly US denomination (as well as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and a few others). Italy, where Rome is, uses the EURO. ______________________________ Rome, Italy has never used any "dollar" bills as currency; the euro is the official Italian currency. Bills of $1,000 US Dollar denominations are no longer in circulation; the largest US banknote is $100. Distribution of high-denomination bills ended in 1969. This was intended to make it inconvenient for drug traffickers and other criminals to carry large amounts of cash.
"500 hundred" would be 50,000. There has never been a 50,000 dollar bill. There were a few $10,000 bills printed, and an even smaller number of $100,000 bills, used only for transactions between federal reserve banks. There also was a $500 dollar bill, which may be what you're asking about. None of these bills are still in circulation. They're still technically legal US currency, but the treasury department has been removing them from circulation for over 40 years now and they're worth considerably more than face value to collectors. The highest denomination of US currency still being printed is the $100 bill, and it's unlikely the treasury will ever authorize the printing of larger denomination bills again (there's no longer any legitimate need for them; large currency transfers are now done electronically, and the only people large denomination bills would really help are drug lords and counterfeiters).