In 1957, the one dollar bill was modified to say 'in God we trust.' The 1957 silver dollar bill is sold online for between 300 and 700 dollars, depending on the bill's markings and overall quality.
Depending on how worn it is, about $1.10 to $1.50.
Minimum...$1.00
This is a common date. They are worth $1.25-$1.50 in circulated condition and $3.00 or more in uncirculated condition. Note: The serial number on a bill rarely changes the value of a bill so it is not needed to figure out the value.
No. 1957 silver certificates were printed in large numbers and many were saved when silver certificates were discontinued only a few years later, so most of them have only a small extra value. Please see the Related Question for more information.
The last silver certificates were worth $1 and dated 1957.If you have a Federal Reserve Note with that date, it's worth about $22 in circulated condition. A dealer will pay you face value.
Do you mean 1957? That was the last series year for silver certificates.If that's correct, you have one of the most common examples of that type of bill. Current retail is around $1.25 for a circulated one. Dealers will pay face value only.
If you mean a series 1957 silver certificate 1 dollar bill value may be $5.00 but only if it's a crisp uncirculated note with no folds, it's got to look like a new bill
There's no such bill. The U.S. only printed $1 silver certificates with that date. Please check again and post a new question.
1957 is an extremely common series for $1 silver certificates. On average, they're worth around $2.
1957 silver certificates were saved in large numbers because the series was being discontinued in favor of Federal Reserve Notes. Unfortunately that means your bill is only worth 50 cents to a dollar more than face value.
what is the value of a five dollar bill silver certificate
The series 1957 $1 silver certificate is a common bill, not worth much more than face. In crisp, uncirculated condition, it might be worth upwards of about $5.
i just bought a 1957-a mint condition $1.00 bill today, 02.23.2012 for $14.50.MorePlease see the Related Question for average prices
Lowest buy it now 12.00 and maybe as much as 35.00. See below-
1957 $1 bills are silver certificates. In the old days, you could trade that dollar for $1 worth of silver, or silver dollars. Right now, you can sell them or keep it.
There were no 50.00 bills in 1957. Your answer is zero.
The last silver certificates were printed with the date 1957. All green-seal dollar bills are worth face value only, unless they're uncirculated.
Your bill is called a silver certificate rather than a silver dollar bill. 1957 silver certificates are still quite common among collectors. If yours is circulated it might retail for at most $1.50 or $2.00 depending on condition. Also please note that serial numbers do not generally affect the value of a bill unless they are "special" in some way; e.g. a low number like 000000005 or a pattern such as 12345678