a mint condition silver certificate is worth $5-$6.
Please look at the bill more carefully. It's a Federal Reserve Note, not a silver certificate.
Retail values range from $45 if worn to over $100 if only slight wear is visible.
It's actually the fr229a that is worth substantially more due to rarity. Less than 100 of these are known to exist in all grades. A High graded fr229a is extremely valuable and can approach $20,000
there weren't any notes issued in 1927
Poor grade is worth around $50 and excellent condition is worth around $250. So it would be safe to say that fine is worth between $100-$150.
a mint condition silver certificate is worth $5-$6.
Please look at the bill more carefully. It's a Federal Reserve Note, not a silver certificate.
Depends on which series and what condition it is in. A series 1957 could range from $1.25 to $10. A series 1899 would be $100 or more, possibly much more if in high condition.
Retail values range from $45 if worn to over $100 if only slight wear is visible.
It's actually the fr229a that is worth substantially more due to rarity. Less than 100 of these are known to exist in all grades. A High graded fr229a is extremely valuable and can approach $20,000
The most valuable silver certificate has to be the 1880 $100 note. Even a well-worn example is worth over $4,000 -- and a nice crisp uncirculated one could easily be worth over $100,000
there weren't any notes issued in 1927
It's a novelty item worth roughly the value of the paper it's printed on.
I have a few of the Black Eagles us collectors call them, The value really depends on the paper condition. Get on E-Bay and check condition and there value, If you hold it up to a light and has no micro holes nor stains your in the 100-175.00 ballpark.
A 1918 US $100 bill should be a National Currency Federal Reserve Banknote; the last $100 silver certificates were dated 1891. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1918 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
The US never printed 100 dollar silver certificates with this date.