There has never been an Italian $500 bill because Italy never used dollars. Since 2002 they have used the euro as their currency. Before that they used the lira.
Please determine which bill you have and post a new, separate question.
Its not worth anything anymore because Italy transfered over to the Euro.
Nothing. The Lire has been demonetized and replaced with the Euro.
Nothing. The Lira is no longer used in Italy it has been replaced with Euro.
8 or 10 dollars,
if the flags are opposite to the wind. more but is difficult.
Well if it has an early serial number it could be worth a couple thousand dollars! check the link. http://www.doudarbanknotes.com/Scripts/prodView.asp?idproduct=534#
An uncirculated mint condition note would be worth $200. A used, Very Fine condition note is worth $30 and the poorer quality Very Good only $4.
NothingThe Italian Lira was abolished in 2002.
Lire is the plural of Lira that is Italian. So 5000 Italian Lire worth $ 3.52 And for Other phase There is a currency that is Turkish Lira. And 5000 Turkish Lira worth $ 235.51
In 2021, 100 Italian lire from 1950 would be equivalent to less than 1 US cent. The Italian lira was replaced by the euro in 2002, and due to inflation and the currency conversion rate, the value of the lire has significantly decreased.
Italy stopped using the Lira in 2002. 2000 Lira would have been worth about $1.20.
'Lira' was the past currency before Euro. 'Lire' is the plural form of it: 1 Lira, 2 Lire. Lira in Italian is also a musical instrument.
5000 Italian Lire is $3. 46 US dollars. The Lire is the official currency of Italy. The US dollar is the official currency in the US and its territories.
The Italian lira was Italy's currency before it was replaced by the Euro. In the context of a "12,000 lire", it would refer to an amount of 12,000 units of the Italian lira currency.
The Italian is an obsolete currency and is no longer used. Italy uses the euro for its currency. In June of 2014, the 1,000 euros were worth 1361.28 American dollars.
Italian Lire are obsolete and can no longer be converted to U.S. Dollars.
It used to be the Lire, but now it's the Euro.
The Italian lira (including the 500 lire note) was replaced by the euro in 2002. Therefore, a 500 lire note is no longer legal tender and has no exchange value. However, as a collectible item, its value would depend on factors such as age, condition, and rarity to collectors.
The answer depends on which country's currency the question is about. The Italian lire have been obsolete since 2002. The Turkish lira was worth almost 114 US quarters on 20 August 2017.