You can take it to a coin dealer and have it appraised.
Yes ... but it's not a REAL certificate. It's a novelty item that sells for a couple of dollars.
No, The law was changed in 1968 and these bills can not be changed for silver. They are still worth the dollar value though
It's almost never a wise idea to cash in old paper currency. Banks are not permitted to buy collectible money; they can only exchange it for current coins or bills at face value. All you'd get would be a nice 21st century $1 bill or $1 coin. However depending on its condition and series letter, a 1928 US 1 dollar silver certificate can be worth anywhere from a few dollars to over $1000 to a collector so it should be evaluated by a dealer or appraiser. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
The highest denomination silver U.S. coin was $1. Please determine what country your coin comes from an post a new question with that information.
You can take it to a coin dealer and have it appraised.
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The Denver mint did not strike any silver dollars in 1928. You may have a 1928-S where the S is indistinct. This coin is worth $20 to $30 depending on condition.
Silver certificates issued from 1928 to 1957 are easy to identify. They have distinctive blue seals and serial numbers, and the words "Silver Certificate" are across the top of the bill's front. Older bills may or may not say "Silver Certificate", but will have some reference to "Payable in silver", "Redeemable in Silver Coin", or similar phrasing.
you would be looking around the 1.5 million mark
Yes ... but it's not a REAL certificate. It's a novelty item that sells for a couple of dollars.
It is worth whatever melt is. The silver dollar is damaged and they never use rare dates (the 1928 peace dollar is rare, it is likely a 1928-S coin which is quite common) and so it would be worth about $20 for the coin. However, there is the question on whether the money clip itself is silver, usually the clip would be marked "STERLING" or 925 if it is silver. If the clip is silver, you have added value with whatever the weight of the silver clip is.
A silver certificate is paper currency. It is not a coin. No silver dollars were minted in 1943, and no silver certificates were printed with that date either.
No, The law was changed in 1968 and these bills can not be changed for silver. They are still worth the dollar value though
It's almost never a wise idea to cash in old paper currency. Banks are not permitted to buy collectible money; they can only exchange it for current coins or bills at face value. All you'd get would be a nice 21st century $1 bill or $1 coin. However depending on its condition and series letter, a 1928 US 1 dollar silver certificate can be worth anywhere from a few dollars to over $1000 to a collector so it should be evaluated by a dealer or appraiser. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
It's a novelty item worth roughly the value of the paper it's printed on.
SIMPLE ANSWER: The 1928 Philadelphia issue (no mintmark) coin. Average retail value is $275.00 for a coin graded G-4.