According to Federal Reserve Bank Services, a bundle is comprised of 10 currency straps of 100 bills each for all bills greater than $1. A currency strap of $100 bills is worth $10,000 and a 10-strap bundle totals $100,000. 100 notes is the worldwide standard count for one strap – regardless of denomination.
A $10,000 stack of $100 bills would measure about one-half an inch thick. A pile of $100 bills totaling $1 million dollars would fit inside a standard school backpack, while $100 million would fit on a standard construction pallet. And $1 billion of $100 bills would be 10 standard construction pallets.
2,000\div100=20, so you need 20 one-hundred dollar bills to make $2,000. You need ten times as many as that, or 200, to make $20,000.
Ten thousand $100 bills equals $1 million (10,000 x $100 = $1,000,000).
If you're referring to 1000 $100 bills, it's a somewhat significant cubic volume of cash if in one stack. It's about 4 1/2 inches tall, 6 inches long, and 2 1/2 inches wide. It easily fits inside of a typical size shoe box with room for quite a bit more.
There are 1000 hundreds in 100000.
The $100,000 bill is the highest denomination ever issued by the U.S. Federal Government. Printed in 1934, it was not intended for general use, but instead was used as an accounting device between branches of the Federal Reserve. It is illegal for a private individual to own this banknote.
If stacked, the $1 billion in $100 bills would be 10,000 feet tall – imagine 10 Eiffel Towers stacked on top of each other.
$1,000,000,000. A billion dollars is 10 crates of $100 bills. There are at least 536 people in America who have at least this many crates worth of money.
The height of a stack of 1,000 one dollar bills measures 4.3 inches. The height of a stack of 1,000,000 one dollar bills measures 4,300 inches or 358 feet – about the height of a 30 to 35 story building. The height of a stack of 100,000,000 (one hundred million) one dollar bills measures 35,851 feet or 6.79 miles.
Not all two dollar bills are worth ten thousand times their original market price. Only 1986-series bill with an AUH-prefix on the seven digit serial number below the bill's pic is worth the whopping 20 grand.
The Federal government only printed 60,000 bills over both years of production. From this meager initial supply, only the 336 bills we highlighted earlier are known to exist. While there may have been more issues of the $10,000, only the 1918, 1928, and 1934 series have information available in the public domain.
Even though the thousand dollar bill has been discontinued for more than 50 years, it's still considered legal tender. This means that any thousand dollar bill you find is worth at least face value, or $1,000. However, most of these bills are collectors' items and are worth much more than face value.
A bundle consists of 1,000 notes of the same denomination in ten equal straps of 100 notes each. All strap edges must be vertically aligned into a single organized stack and oriented in the same direction. Straps must be bound together.
There are 100 hundreds in 10,000.
If you stacked $100 bills totaling $1 trillion on top of each other, the stack would be 631 miles high. This is what $1 trillion in spending look like.
The United States has never issued a million dollar bill. However, many businesses print million dollar bills for sale as novelties. Such bills do not assert that they are legal tender. The Secret Service has declared them legal to print or own and does not consider them counterfeit.
Also, a trillion dollars in one-dollar bills would weigh 2.2 billion pounds. If you stacked those trillion dollar bills end-to-end they'd stretch about 97,000,000 miles, further than the distance from Earth to our sun.
A trillion is a thousand billion, and it's a million, million. Let's look at a few statistics. A stack of one billion dollars bills would be 67.9 miles high. A trillion dollar bills would reach 67,866 miles into space.
Suppose you had $1-billion. You could spend $5,000 a day for more than 500 years before you would run out of money. Breaking it down even farther, it means you would have to spend over $100,000 every day for the next 25 years in order to spend $1-billion.
Noting that the width of a dollar bill is 2.61 inches and the length is 6.14 inches, a standard pallet measuring 40" by 48" would fit about 100 stacks of $1M (stacked vertically to a height of 43"), so a billion dollars would fit on ten standard pallets.
As we discussed in the definition of a trillion, one trillion is written as 1,000,000,000,000 in the International number system. It has 12 zeros after the 1.
2-dollar bills can range in value from two dollars to $1000 or more. If you have a pre-1913 2-dollar bill in uncirculated condition, it is worth at least $500. Even in circulated condition, these very old 2-dollar bills are worth $100 and up.
It also contains the (important) words 'non-negotiable', meaning the legal tender value is zero. In summary: Banknotes of one million and one billion US dollars are worth nothing. We cannot exchange them, and they should not be considered as money.