In the same condition, 1953-series $5 silver certificates are worth roughly the same amount regardless of their series letters - $8 to $10 for circulated bills, $18 to $20 for uncirculated ones.
The silver certificate and the gold certificate were replaced by the Federal Reserve Dollar.
The value of the 5 dollar 1936 silver certificate is not available because there was no certificate of this denomination issued in 1936. The certificate is most likely a fake.
The Chief 1899 $5 dollar silver certificate is paper money.
A 1934 five dollar silver certificate in good condition is worth $33.00.
Check that bill again. There was no $1 silver certificate dated 1931.
The silver certificate and the gold certificate were replaced by the Federal Reserve Dollar.
There is no such thing as a 1989 $1 Silver Certificate.
The value of the 5 dollar 1936 silver certificate is not available because there was no certificate of this denomination issued in 1936. The certificate is most likely a fake.
A silver certificate is a US banknote (bill) that could be redeemed for an equivalent amount of silver. Please see the question "What is a silver certificate?" for a much more detailed explanation.
A silver certificate is a US banknote (bill) that could be redeemed for an equivalent amount of silver. Please see the question "What is a silver certificate?" for a much more detailed explanation.
The Chief 1899 $5 dollar silver certificate is paper money.
A 1934 five dollar silver certificate in good condition is worth $33.00.
Check that bill again. There was no $1 silver certificate dated 1931.
The U.S. hasn't printed silver certificates since the 1960s, and there was never a $2 silver certificate.
The US issued both $5 and $10 silver certificates with that date. Please make sure your bill has a blue seal and the words Silver Certificate across the top, then check one of these questions: "What is the value of a 1953 US 5 dollar silver certificate?" "What is the value of a 1953 US 10 dollar silver certificate?"
Normally it would be necessary to have its denomination but the only bill fitting that description is a $1 silver certificate. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 D US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for detailed information.
A silver certificate is paper currency. It is not a coin. No silver dollars were minted in 1943, and no silver certificates were printed with that date either.