$150.00 They have no other value
0
If you have 100 one-hundred-dollar bills in sequential numbers, their total value is $10,000. The sequential numbering does not affect their monetary value; it remains the same as any other set of 100 one-hundred-dollar bills. Collectors may find sequentially numbered bills more interesting, possibly increasing their collectible value, but in terms of face value, it's still $10,000.
If you have 20 ten-dollar bills, that amounts to a total of $200. Since each twenty-dollar bill is worth $20, you would get 10 twenty-dollar bills from that $200.
4 2dollar bills, 1 five, and 1 one. They do make two dollar bills, but they are rare.
17 million one-dollar bills would stack to about 6,091.67 feet high.
$100....
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Yes. $5 for all 5. I'll buy them.
The value of 1981 one-dollar bills in sequential order is primarily determined by their condition and demand among collectors. Generally, these bills are worth their face value of one dollar unless they have unique features, such as misprints or being part of a rare serial number sequence. In uncirculated condition, they might fetch a small premium, but typically they are valued at around $1 to $5 each. For a complete series in sequential order, the total would be simply the face value multiplied by the number of bills.
Uncirculated bills retail for about $3. Circulated bills are only worth face value.
As opposed to fake uncirculated two dollar bills? That's very unlikely because $2 bills are generally not worth counterfeiting. In any case, please see the Related Question for more information.
If you have 100 one-hundred-dollar bills in sequential numbers, their total value is $10,000. The sequential numbering does not affect their monetary value; it remains the same as any other set of 100 one-hundred-dollar bills. Collectors may find sequentially numbered bills more interesting, possibly increasing their collectible value, but in terms of face value, it's still $10,000.
If you have four of them, then the set is worth $80.
The paper dollar is worth about $5 in uncirculated condition -- the coin dollar is worth about $15 in uncirculated condition
Modern-date bills with consecutive serial numbers in a small group (in this case, 5 bills) are relatively easy to get from a bank. In general, they have little or no added value. If they're all uncirculated, they'd probably be worth more for that fact than for being in sequential order. Even so, 2003 bills are new enough that an uncirculated one might retail for $3 or $4 at most.
In perfect uncirculated condition it is worth $6. In normal used condition is is worth exactly $2.
Like all modern $1 bills, a 1999 US $1 bill is worth one dollar. If your question is asking if it's worth more than one dollar to a collector, these bills have no added value unless they're in the best possible uncirculated condition.