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  2. Fancy Serial Numbers Turn Dollar Bills Into Pricey Collectors ...

    www.aol.com/news/on-fancy-serial-numbers-dollar...

    As such, it seems you'll get the most value in trade if you find the weird serial number on a lower denomination -- getting $200 for a dollar bill is a lot more profitable than the same amount for ...

  3. Paper Money Value by Serial Numbers: Determine Your Bills' Worth

    www.aol.com/paper-money-value-serial-numbers...

    Collectors love bills with low serial numbers, such as those below 1,000 or 100 (e.g., 00000100). On eBay, these kinds of bills can sell for anywhere from $10 to $300.

  4. Rare Currency: How To Find Out If Your Bills and Coins Are ...

    www.aol.com/rare-currency-bills-coins-worth...

    Bills With Serial Number Oddities A $20 bill sold for nearly $400,000 at an auction in 2021, because it had a serial number printed on top and a Del Monte fruit sticker.

  5. Check your wallet: Your $1 bills might be worth thousands of ...

    www.aol.com/article/finance/2017/09/05/check...

    Depending on the rarity of your bill’s serial number, it could be worth a crazy amount of money — CoolSerialNumbers.com is currently selling bills for anywhere from $35 to $5,000. Contact the ...

  6. United States ten-thousand-dollar bill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_ten-thousand...

    The United States 10,000-dollar bill (US$10000) (1878–1934) is an obsolete denomination of the United States dollar. The $10,000 note was the highest denomination of US currency to be used by the public and was no longer issued after 1969. These notes are still legal tender, and thus banks will redeem them for face value.

  7. Black Eagle Silver Certificate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Eagle_Silver_Certificate

    The one-dollar silver certificate was issued by the United States in 1899. [7] The first Black Eagle notes began arriving at banks in January 1899. [7] When the BEP identified mistakes in the printing of the 1899 Black Eagle, they printed replacement notes that had a star preceding the serial number on the obverse.