To clear things up, it's a silver certificate, not a silver certified bill, and the serial number is just a counter and security feature, and normally doesn't affect a bill's value.There's more information at the Related Question.
A star in front of or after the serial number on any US bill (not just a silver certificate) means it was printed to replace a bill that was damaged during production. The damaged bills cause a break in the serial number sequence of their print run. Because bills are printed in large groups it would be very difficult to re-use missing serial numbers; each bill would have to be reprinted individually. Instead, the replacement notes have their own set of serial numbers with a star instead of one of the letters to indicate that their status.
The United States Silver Certificate is redeemable only only a 1:1 ratio with the Federal Reserve Dollar. They are still legal tender at face value, but they are not worth any silver. Sorry.
That's an extremely broad question, because silver certificates were printed for many years in several denominations. Please post a more specific query giving the bills' denominations, dates, and what letter if any appears next to the date. You do NOT have to copy their serial numbers because they don't normally affect value. what is a dlooar bill worth with the serial number astric 28359767B silver certificate
Silver certificates were issued for almost a century in many designs and denominations so that's far too broad a question to be answered without writing a small book. Many late-date (e.g. 1957) $1 silver certificates are worth only slightly more than face value because they were saved by the carload when the government announced they would no longer be printed. However, older silver certificates and those with higher denominations can often be worth a premium. If you have specific bills, please look for questions in the form "What is the value of a (date) US (value) silver certificate?"; for example, "What is the value of a 1953 US 10 dollar silver certificate?" You do not have to copy the bill's serial number. In most cases serial numbers don't affect a bill's value or help to ID it.
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Silver certificates don't always have a letter in the beginning of the serial number. They can have a star. Otherwise they all have letters.
A silver certificate star-note would normally be worth around $5 or so, depending on how worn it is.
Information needed to give a value includes the denomination, series (date), and condition. A serial number by itself is meaningless.
Less than 11% of all the 1957 series Silver Certificates have the star by the serial no. If your Silver Certificate is in choice crisp condition it is worth $40.00. In circulated condition, it's worth about $5.00
About $25. If there is a star in the serial number, about $40.
About $9 - $10 if it is in uncirculated condition.
in good condition, 3-5$
Please post a new question with the date and condition of the bill. Please do not include the serial number.
The worth of a silver certificate with serial # 60292929 is about $3 to $5 if it is in uncirculated condition. Unfortunately, this serial is not a true repeater. It needed to be 29292929. However, it is still a cool serial.
The value of a 1957 silver certificate dollar bill with a star in front of the serial number depends on its condition. In circulated condition, it may be worth slightly above face value to collectors. In uncirculated condition, it could be worth around $10-20 to collectors. The specific serial number does not significantly impact the value in this case.
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