Fake denominations
Other denominations of bills have been created by individuals as practical jokes or as genuine attempts at counterfeiting.
In 2001, a man bought a sundae at a Dairy Queen with a $200 bill (with George W. Bush on it) and received $198 in change.
In September 2003, an unknown individual in North Carolina used a $200 bill (also with George W. Bush's likeness on it) at a Food Lion to purchase $150 in groceries. The cashier obligingly cashed the fake bill and presented the perpetrator with $50 in change.
In March 2004, Alice Regina Pike attempted to use a $1,000,000 bill with a picture of the Statue of Liberty on the front to purchase $1671.55 in goods from a Wal-Mart in Covington, Georgia, for which she was then arrested.
Though not actually meant to be used as actual legal tender, Christian evangelist Ray Comfort's ministry, Living Waters Publications, produces another fake $1,000,000 bill, which is in reality a Christian gospel tract.
Various $3 bills have been released, generally poking fun at politicians or celebrities such as Bill Clinton, Michael Jackson, or Hillary Clinton; this likely stems from the American idiom "queer as a three-dollar bill."
The largest denomination of US currency ever made was the 100,000 dollar bill. Currently, the largest denomination printed is the 100 dollar bill. Many novelty shops sell fake 1,000,000 dollar bills but these are "valuable" only as jokes.
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There is no one million dollar bill in US currency.
No. The US has never printed a 1 million dollar bill, and no US bills of any denomination are dated 1940.
If you are saying you have a 1 Million dollar US Bill from 1996, then, no it is not real
Any U.S. million dollar bill you might find is only a novelty and is NOT legal tender.
There is no such thing as a $1Million dollar bill in US currency. There are some countries that have 1 Million unit bills.
No, it is not true that the United States has a $1 million dollar bill.
The US never printed a million-dollar note. There are novelty items that look like $1,000,000 bills but they're intended as jokes.
5 cents, maybe. The U.S. has NEVER printed a $1 million bill, so any you might find are only novelties.
The United States never printed a $1 million bill. You have a novelty item that sells for a few dollars in gift and joke shops.
The Bahamian Dollar is pegged 1:1 with the US Dollar, so a $1 Bahamas bill is worth exactly $1 US Dollar.
None, because the US never printed a million-dollar note. There are novelty items that look like $1,000,000 bills but they're intended as jokes.
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