Ireland uses the euro and the €100 note is in circulation. You may be able to get a €200 or €500 note at a bank but few merchants will accept them.
500 dollars. These bills were withdrawn in 69 but still in circulation and still legal tender.
The largest bill of legal tender that is in circulation in the United States is the one hundred dollar bill.
The largest bill of legal tender in Germany is the €500 note, which is part of the euro currency. However, the European Central Bank announced in 2016 that it would stop producing the €500 note due to concerns about its use in illegal activities such as money laundering.
No. The British Penny is only Legal Tender in amounts up to 20 Pence.
That would depend on what currency (country) the 1000 bill was for.
The $50 Bill? Yes.
Yes, it's still legal tender at face value. However, a bill that old would have additional value to a collector.
No. Although the $500 bill remains legal tender, the largest bill still in circulation in the United States is a $100 bill. You could purchase a $500 bill as a collectible item from a coin/currency dealer, but it would cost you more than $500.
Everywhere. They're legal tender and are still being printed.
Sure, it is legal tender, they cannot refuse to take it.
No. To be considered legal tender, it's explicitly stated that more than half of the bill must be intact.
Million-dollar bills are an urban legend. Since the US has never printed a $1,000,000 legal tender bill, any such "currency" is a privately-made novelty item so it's worthless except as a curiosity. The largest genuine US bill was the $100,000 bill, used in the 20th Century for Federal Reserve Bank transfers. The largest bill that circulated was the $10,000 bill. Modern US currency is no larger than $100.