A gazillion dollars is worth a billion, billion dollar bills! $1,000,000,000,000,000,000Except a gazillion is not an actual number it just means a very large amount. But if it were a number that would be what it is worth!
Two thousand $500 dollar bills?... Depends on the size of the can Of course. If you have a large coffee can and your million is not in bills but in the form of bonds or Certificates of Deposit, for example. You can definitely have a million dollars or even more in a coffee can. You can probably even have a million dollars if you have a VERY large can and EACH bill is worth $1,000.00, in which case you would only need 1,000 bills to make $1,000,000.00
You have a novelty item that sells for a couple of bucks in gift shops and dollar stores. After all, in 1923 a billion dollars was a large chunk of the country's entire GDP so it wouldn't have made any reasonable sense to print bills in that denomination. In fact the US never issued any circulation bills higher than $10,000. The largest US bills ever printed were the series 1934 $100,000 notes that were only used for intra-government transactions.
Only if you have 10 100 hundred dollar bills. Only if you have 10 100 hundred dollar bills. Only if you are carrying a credit, if you have a check or if you have 10 $100 bills. Actually it would take one hundred $100 bills. But to answer the question: YES, you can carry that amount in cash. However, to keep from getting in trouble, you will need a document (usually from a financial institution) to show where the money came from and the purpose. The reason for that is there is so much money laundering from illegal activities that large amounts of cash are always suspect.
Depending on its form, it could be just the symbols '$1,000,000,000.00' on a screen or on a piece of paper, or it could be a single note, or it could be a large number of notes and/or coins. A football is 300 feet x 159 feet = 47,700 square feet. Assuming a cubic foot contains 6000 dollars, a billion dollars would cover a football field 3.5 feet high. A dollar 156mm long, x 1,000,000,000 will circle the earth about 4 times.
A gazillion dollars is worth a billion, billion dollar bills! $1,000,000,000,000,000,000Except a gazillion is not an actual number it just means a very large amount. But if it were a number that would be what it is worth!
Two thousand $500 dollar bills?... Depends on the size of the can Of course. If you have a large coffee can and your million is not in bills but in the form of bonds or Certificates of Deposit, for example. You can definitely have a million dollars or even more in a coffee can. You can probably even have a million dollars if you have a VERY large can and EACH bill is worth $1,000.00, in which case you would only need 1,000 bills to make $1,000,000.00
You have a novelty item that sells for a couple of bucks in gift shops and dollar stores. After all, in 1923 a billion dollars was a large chunk of the country's entire GDP so it wouldn't have made any reasonable sense to print bills in that denomination. In fact the US never issued any circulation bills higher than $10,000. The largest US bills ever printed were the series 1934 $100,000 notes that were only used for intra-government transactions.
No. Watermarks were introduced with the new large-portrait bills.
10,000,000,000 one hundred dollar bills in a very large briefcase.
Abraham printed 450 million dollars a large amount for the time. This may the reason. Benjamin Harrison was known for the "Billion dollar Congress" in 1889. These two presidents were all the only ones that I recalled having a million dollars nick name.
depends on size small a dollar medium dollar thirty large dollar seventy XL 2 dollars
No, large denominations of US bills such as the 1000.00 dollar bill are used for government transactions only and cannot be obtained by the public.
Zimbabwe recently issued $100,000 bills due to high inflation. Of course they were Zimbabwean dollars which are worth MUCH less than US dollars. The US printed a small number of $100,000 bills in 1934 and 1935. They were never intended for circulation, but were used for transferring large amounts of money between government departments in those days before electronic funds transfers were possible.
Well over a billion videos are seen a day or so they say and google bought the site for 1.6 billion dollars.. you tell me :)
The United States last minted silver dollars in 1935, then reintroduced the large dollar in 1971. There are no dollars for any of the 1940s, '50s, or '60s.
Currently there are none larger then $100.00. however there was a time when 500.00,1000.00,5,000, and 10,000 bills were made. The large bills over $5000.00 where used for banks to transfer monies.