Yes, but only on modern bills. When looking at the front side of the bill, the watermark is to the right, visible when held to light. It shows President Jackson's portrait.
no
Yes, most U.S. bills from 1996 on, including the $20 note, have watermarks.
Yes, the $100 US dollar bill has a watermark. The watermark features a portrait of Benjamin Franklin, which is visible when the bill is held up to the light. This security feature is designed to help prevent counterfeiting and is one of several elements that make the bill harder to replicate.
The watermark on U.S. dollar bills was introduced with the redesign of the $20 bill in 1998 and has been a feature on various denominations since then, including the $100 bill in 2013. The watermark is a security feature intended to help deter counterfeiting and is visible when the bill is held up to the light. Prior to this, watermarks were used in earlier designs, but the modern versions are more sophisticated and prominent.
At least $100 US dollars (isn't it obvious?)
No, there's only a single watermark on current US bills $5 and above. $1 and $2 bills don't have watermarks.
Andrew Jackson is on the 20 dollar bill
The White House is on the twenty dollar bill. ($20)
1996
The 1914 $20 dollar bill with Grover Cleveland on the front.
200
The watermark doesn't fluoresce under UV light. There's a separate security strip with that feature. The colors for all current bills are:$100 - pink$50 - yellow$20 - green$10 - orange$5 - blueCongress has prevented any redesign of $1 and $2 bills so they don't have modern anti-counterfeiting features, including either watermarks or security strips.