About 67,866.16 miles tall.
A US dollar bill is reportedly .0043 inches thick. Assuming the same for a 100 dollar bill, a stack of 100 dollar bills totalling one million dollars would be 43 inches tall. It takes 10,000 such bills to equal a million dollars. 10,000 X .0043 = 43 inches. Interestingly, using these measurements, a billion dollars would be just over 3583 feet tall, and a trillion dollars would be just over 678.66 miles tall!
500,000 dollar bills
Each bill is 0.0043 inches (0.11 mm) thick, and there are 10 million $100 bills in $1 billion. So 10 million bills stacked up would make a stack 43,000 inches -- or about 2/3 mile -- high.
13 inches
That depends on what bills you are using.
50 billion of them.
10,000,000,000.
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, a stack of a trillion dollars in 100 dollar bills would be about 789 miles high. That's like stacking cash all the way from New York City to Chicago. Just imagine the view from up there, right?
About 67,866.16 miles tall.
A trillion dollars in one dollar bills would way about 1.1 million tons, or 2.2 billion pounds. If you were using 100 dollar bills it would way about 11 thousands tons
1 trillion = 1012 1000 = 103 Then subtract exponents.
About 3 million feet.
17.92' high, stacked in one pile.
A trillion dollars in one hundred dollar bills would weigh about 11 million pounds, or roughly 5,000 metric tons. The weight of the bills comes from the density of paper currency, which is approximately 1 gram per bill.
1000 trillion dollars is bigger than 999 trillion dollars. 1,000 trillion is also called one quadrillion.
111 if you pack it real tight!