Please check the top of your bill; it should say Federal Reserve Note across the top. The last silver certificates were $1 bills dated 1957 and the last $5 silver certificates were issued in the 1953 series.
There are two different designs of $5 bills in the 2006 series - the old green and black design with Lincoln's portrait in an oval, and the new purple and gray ones without a border around the portrait. Both are very common and have no added value.
The value is only for the silver in the coin (1oz) cash value will be a little less than the spot price of silver at time of sale, so about $15.00
Your coin is a bullion piece sold for its silver value. It fluctuates with the price of 1 oz of pure silver, around $18 as of 07/2008.
It is worth what 1 oz of silver is worth which at the time of writing is $27.59 but silver changes in prices very frequently.
Please check the top of your bill; it should say Federal Reserve Note across the top. The last silver certificates were $1 bills dated 1957. Any standard US bill dated 2006 is too new to have any extra value.
It's a bullion coin sold for its silver content. As of 07/2008 that's around $17 but varies with the spot price of silver - check the financial section of a newspaper, or CNNMoney.com, for recent quotes.
It's a bullion coin sold for its silver content. As of 07/2008 that's around $17 but varies with the spot price of silver - check the financial section of a newspaper, or CNNMoney.com, for recent quotes.
If you've got an uncirculated coin it is worth silver melt (it has 1 troy ounce of silver), about $32 at the time of writing (although silver spot changes dramatically). If you've got a proof issue (should be in a box with a capsule and should say "proof" on the COA included in the box) you've got a small premium over silver melt, about $50 for a coin in box with the COA included.
All you have is a regular series 2006 $1 bill with a Santa decal over Washington's portrait. It's worth one dollar.
It's a bullion coin sold for its silver content. As of 07/2008 that's around $17 but varies with the spot price of silver - check the financial section of a newspaper, or CNNMoney.com, for recent quotes.
It's still worth exactly $10.
It's worth exactly 100 dollars.
Probably around $22-25 USD.