Yes, it's still legal tender at face value. However, a bill that old would have additional value to a collector.
The Australian Dollar is Legal Tender in Australia. The Bahamian Dollar is Legal Tender in the Bahamas. The Barbados Dollar is Legal Tender in Barbados. The Bermuda Dollar is Legal Tender in Bermuda. The Canadian Dollar is Legal Tender in Canada. The Fiji Dollar is Legal Tender in Fiji. The Hong Kong Dollar is Legal Tender in Hong Kong. The Jamaican Dollar is Legal Tender in Jamaica. The New Zealand Dollar is Legal Tender in New Zealand. The Singapore Dollar is Legal Tender in Singapore. The US Dollar is Legal Tender in the USA.
Yes, the US Dollar 2009 series is still valid and can be used as legal tender for transactions in the United States.
The largest bill of legal tender that is in circulation in the United States is the one hundred dollar bill.
It's a font called UNITED STATES or LEGAL TENDER-- You can find it here: http://simplythebest.net/fonts/fonts/unitedstates.html
Grover Cleveland, the 22nd and 24th President of the United States, appeared on the $1000 bill (a denomination which, while still legal tender, no longer circulates in the United States).
It's a font called UNITED STATES or LEGAL TENDER-- You can find it here: http://simplythebest.net/fonts/fonts/unitedstates.html
The U.S. doesn't issue $3 bills - only 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100. Anything that looks like a modern bill with a $3 denomination is a novelty item worth about as much as the paper it's printed on.
The first $500 bill was issued by the United States in 1861. It featured a portrait of William McKinley, the 25th President of the United States. The bill was last printed in 1945 and officially discontinued in 1969, although it remains legal tender.
No, Canadian coins are not generally accepted as legal tender in the United States.
No, Canadian money cannot be used as legal tender in the United States.
Yep, they are legal tender.
Not really. Before the Federal Reserve System, some banks made three-dollar bills, which were legal tender at the time. During the civil war, the confederacy printed three-dollar bills. There has never been a United States 3-dollar bill though.