Ten Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup Rating: 3,8/5 8015 votes

These pages list the serial number ranges used for each series and denomination ofU.S. currency.

  1. Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup
  2. Ten Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup 700
  3. Canadian 10 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup
  4. Twenty Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup
  5. 10 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup Value
  6. Ten Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup

Cool Numbers analyzes a dollar bill serial number (or any 8-digit numbers) for cool patterns, and reports the probability associated with various patterns. Serial numbers contain 8 numerical digits. The 1st letter preceding the serial number corresponds to the Federal Reserve Bank branch that printed the bill (A = Boston, B = New York, and so on). The 2nd letter refers to the number of times that serial number has been used, with A representing the 1st time, B the 2nd, and so on. Serial numbers contain 8 numerical digits. The 1st letter preceding the serial number corresponds to the Federal Reserve Bank branch that printed the bill (A = Boston, B = New York, and so on). The 2nd letter refers to the number of times that serial number has been used, with A representing the 1st time, B the 2nd, and so on. High grade specimens or low serial numbers (under 100) could be worth over $1,000. We pictured star notes from 1934 above. There are five different series to 1934: 1934, 1934A, 1934B, 1934C, and 1934D.

Summary$1$2$5$10$20$50$100
SeriesDenomination
2017A$1$2$5$10$20$50$100
2017$1--$10$20--
2013$1$2$5$10$20$50$100
2009A------$100
2009$1$2$5$10$20$50$100
2006A------$100
2006$1-$10$20$50$100
2004A---$10$20$50-
2003A$1$2$5---$100
2004----$20$50-
2003$1$2$5$10--$100
2001$1-$5$10$20$50$100
1999$1-$5$10$20-$100
1996----$20$50$100
1995$1$2$5$10$20--
1993$1-$5$10$20$50$100
1990---$10$20$50$100
1988A$1-$5$10$20--
1988$1-$5--$50$100
1985$1-$5$10$20$50$100
1981A$1-$5$10$20$50$100
1981$1-$5$10$20$50$100
1977A$1-$5$10---
1977$1-$5$10$20$50$100
1976-$2-----
1974$1-$5$10$20$50$100

The summary pages give an overview of the serial ranges printed for eachdenomination, starting with Series 1928. The individual series pages go into moredetail on block ending numbers, gaps in the numbering, and star note serial ranges.For the more recent series, they also break down the serial ranges by month ofproduction; this information is only available back to December 1973 at present (and is fragmentary prior to August 1976), but I may extend the monthly tables farther back if I can ever find the additional data. Meanwhile, I'm just keeping them up to date as each month's production figures are announced by the BEP.

Latest update: August 2020 production data added, 09/20/20.

Other pages related to serial numbering:

  • How to read the monthly production tables.
  • Serial number summary tables for obsolete high-denomination notes, from $500 to $100,000.
  • Block and group lists for the more recent series.
  • A somewhat technical page on the details of serial numbering systems.
  • Partial data on the serial numbers of the uncutsheets and other special collector offerings sold by the BEP.
  • Serial number ranges for the web press notesthat the BEP was printing a number of years ago.
  • Partial data on the serial ranges for the SOI $20 notes in Series 2006 through 2013.
  • Partial data on the serial ranges for the LEPE vs. COPE $2 notes in Series 2013.
  • An explanation of the earlier differences between COPE and conventional overprinting.

Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup

I'm conducting a survey of older-series star notes, in order to try to pin down some precise serial number ranges that don't seem to have been recorded by the BEP. If you have any stars from Series 1935D through Series 1974, please check the survey page to see if any of your notes fallinto still-unreported ranges. Thanks! :)

Comments? Vreveal 3 premium license key. Questions? Caught a typo? You can email me here.

Main Page

When most people talk about silver certificates they probably think back to $1 1957 silver certificates. However, the United States started issuing silver certificates as early as 1878. Silver certificate has kind of taken on a term to describe any old U.S. bill. Of course only some notes actually are silver certificates. Click on your denomination below to learn more about that note.

$1 – $2 – $5 – $10 – $20 – $50 – $100 – $500 – $1000

So let’s talk about the common ones first. Any silver certificate from 1957 or 1935 is extremely common. That also goes for any combination of letters like 1957B or 1935F. They are all worth around $1.50 in circulated condition and about $5 in perfect condition. These can be bought by the 100s at shows or coin shops. They are no where near rare enough to be collectible. The small premium they do command is just a result of the curiosity factor.
Any 1934 and any 1953 $5 silver certificate with a blue seal is very common. I sell them for $7 in circulated condition. There are some rare star notes from those years. The 1953B star and some 1934 stars are rare. The star symbol would be located at the beginning of the serial number. If a letter begins and ends the serial number, then that is considered a regular issue.
The ten dollar bill is the only other small size denomination printed as a silver certificate. Tens were printed for 1933, 1934, and 1953. The 1933 example is by far the rarest. The other years typically sell for around $15 in circulated condition. Once again, star notes and low serial numbers have a chance to be more valuable. A low serial number on a silver certificate is typically defined as being under 100.

Ten Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup 700

Large size silver certificates were first printed in 1878. Any note from 1878 or 1880 should considered to be scarce. The next line of silver certificates were issued in 1886. These are available, but you still don’t see them especially frequently.

Canadian 10 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup

Lookup

Twenty Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup

1891, 1896, and 1899 silver certificates were printed in large numbers. For the most part, 1891 notes look similar to earlier issues. However, the 1896 and 1899 types are distinctive. The 1896 series is famously known as the educational series. The 1899 line of silver certificates present opportunities to own a black eagle, mini-porthole, or a chief.

10 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup Value


Oddly enough, the 20th century saw the issuance of large size silver certificates in just two years, 1908 and 1923. The 1908 example is a fairly tough $10 note. One and five dollar bills were printed for 1923. The $1 bill is exceptionally common and worth around $15 on average. The $5 bill from 1923 is fairly tough, and usually worth at least a few hundred dollars.

Ten Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup


I would be happy to help answer any questions you might have about your silver certificate. I am also interested in buying different, rare, or high grade notes of any denomination and type. Sales@AntiqueMoney.com

1nfer1or.netlify.app – 2018