No. That's the current design and hundreds of millions are being printed.
There is an urban legend that the new fives are somehow "errors" because they have the same 2006 date as the previous green-and-black bills. However bills are dated by "series" years corresponding to the Secretary of the Treasury who was in office when the printing was authorized. The last set of green/black bills and the first new purple/gray ones were both issued under the administration of Secretary John Paulson, so they all have the same date, 2006. The next series will probably be dated 2009, the year that Timothy Geitner took office as the new Secretary.
$60, its worth $10 extra
It's worth 5 dollars.
One Dollar
one dollar
its a $5 bill, its worth $5
$60, its worth $10 extra
If you are referring to newer 5 dollar bills with a large purple 5 on the reverse, they are only worth $5, they are simply redesigned to make it harder for people to counterfeit. If you are referring to some other "purple 5 dollar bill" it was altered with when it left the Federal Reserve and have little collector value.
The 1943 Trinidad & Tobago 20 Dollar note comes in two versions, one green and one purple. Both are very scarce, and valuable in any quality. A Very Fine example would be worth $1,000 (Green) or $1,500 (Purple) and even a Good is worth $450-$500 (either colour).
a half hundred dollar bill is worth $50
At the time, it was worth one dollar.
It's worth 5 dollars.
There's no genuine JFK $1 bill. It's an ordinary Washington bill that someone altered and sold as a novelty. It has no extra value.
A 100 dollar bill is worth 100 one dollar bills.
A 1986 Canadian 5 dollar bill is worth $10.00
I suspect a $100 dollar bill was worth exactly $100 in 1935!
what is a 1934 thousand dollar bill worth
No.