One dollar or 23 dollar to the dollar faries.
Please post a new question with the bill's date. Serial numbers rarely affect a bill's value. Also, U.S. bills have their serial numbers on the front. If your bill is from a different country include that in your post.
It is not worth anything
Nothing you idiot! If it doesn't have a serial stamp on it, it's gay and worth crap!
Depending on the nature of the error, it could be worth $200 to $500 at retail. Missing serial numbers can occur if the bill wasn't fed through the part of the printing process that adds the seal and serial numbers, or if it was fed in upside down and the seal and serial numbers were printed on the back. In any case it should be seen by a dealer or appraiser who specializes in error currency.
Nothing.
It will be worth one dollar. The serial numbers really do not have an affect on value. There may be collectors that would find it of interest, but they are not likely to pay much for it.
Every serial number is as rare as the next, because every note has a different one.
$500.00
Please post a new question with the bill's date. Serial numbers rarely affect a bill's value. Also, U.S. bills have their serial numbers on the front. If your bill is from a different country include that in your post.
Serial numbers are printed twice as a security measure. However once in a while one of the counters gets stuck and the two numbers become out of sync. Current retail prices are in the $100-200 range.
Serial numbers are printed twice as a security measure. However once in a while one of the counters gets stuck and the two numbers become out of sync. Current retail prices are in the $100-200 range.
Most Likely not because when the serial numbers are that high then it may not be
The value of a five dollar bill is five dollars. It's not clear what you mean by "consecutive serial numbers." If you mean that the bill's serial number looks like "12345678" or something, then a collector might be willing to pay a small premium for it as a curiosity. If you mean that you have two or more five dollar bills where the serial numbers are consecutive, they're worth five dollars each, period.
its aproximently worth 4,562,000 us dollars
This error can be worth $100 to $200 depending on the bill's condition. It's called a "stuck counter" error, and occurs when the two counters that print the serial numbers get out of sync with each other. It's subtle and easy to miss.
A series B one-dollar bill with mismatched serial numbers individually can be worth anywhere from $100 to $400. A set of four could be worth up to $1,200, depending upon the market for the item.
Those numbers are dates, not a serial number. That bill usually sells for about two dollars.