Yes, the US dollar 2013 series is still considered valid currency and can be used for transactions.
Yes, the US Dollar 2006 series is still valid and can be used as legal tender for transactions.
All Susan B. Anthony, Sacagawea, and Presidential series dollar coins are legal tender everywhere in the US. They're not rare and not valuable, and are worth just $1 each.
Yes, the US Dollar 2009 series is still valid and can be used as legal tender for transactions in the United States.
Yes, old 100 bills issued by the U.S. government are still valid currency and can be used for transactions.
It's still worth one dollar.
Damaging a dollar bill intentionally to the point where it can't be used is illegal. It is considered defacement of currency and can be punishable by law. If a dollar bill is accidentally damaged and is no longer usable, it can still be exchanged for a new one at a bank or the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
If you exchanged one Canadian dollar for US currency, you would receive one US dollar.
Yes. United States has been printing currency in the 100 Dollar denomination since 1861 and does so still to this day.
Yes, there was a $1,000 bill in U.S. currency, which featured a portrait of Grover Cleveland. However, it was discontinued in 1969 and is no longer in circulation. While some $1,000 bills still exist and are considered collector's items, they are not used in everyday transactions.
This happened in (about ? ) 1928 when the treasury came out with a new series of currency, with a new, smaller bill - the size that we still have today. He was on the $10 bill for about 20 years before that.
The dollar [SRD] is the current monetary unit in Suriname. It's divided into 100 cents. The dollar replaced the Surinamese guilder on January 1, 2004, with one dollar equal to 1,000 guilders. Coins from this previous currency are still in circulation.
There are no U.S. dollar bills dated 1994, but all U.S. currency from the 1990s is still legal tender at face value.