The largest bank note the US ever printed was $100,000. It was intended for circulation between branches of the Federal Reserve and featured a picture of Woodrow Wilson. Other large bills are: *The $500 bill - William McKinley *The $1,000 bill - Grover Cleveland *The $5,000 bill - James Madison *The $10,000 bill - Salmon P. Chase
See the link below for a picture and explanation.
$100
No US bill that size has ever been printed. $100,000 is the largest bill ever printed, they were only printed for less than a month from December 1934 to January 1935, and were used for internal transactions between Federal Reserve banks.The largest note for public usage was $10,000, and those have been printed since 1934. The largest note printed in 1995 was $100. No, it does not expire.
The largest Canadian bank note is the $1000 bill.
The largest denomination note released for circulation was for $10,000. The largest denomination ever printed was a small group of $100,000 gold certificates printed in 1934 and 1935; these were only used for transferring money between government departments.
The fifty pound Sterling note is the largest bank note in circulation in England.
A 100 dollar note is the largest.
Sorry, but what you have seen is a bogus note that has been printed privately. The largest U.S. note in circulation is $100, and the highest value ever printed was a $100,000 note used for internal money transfers. It never circulated publicly.
No US bills were ever minted. The term "minting" applies only to coins, bills are printed.The largest denomination note released for circulation was for $10,000.The largest denomination ever printed was a small group of $100,000 gold certificates printed in 1934 and 1935; these were only used for transferring money between government departments.
The current highest value UK bank note is the £50 (fifty pound) note.
$100 trillion zimbabwean
The largest denomination of the Pound ever printed for circulation was the One Thousand Pound note issued between 1725 and 1745. The largest denomination of the British Pound currently in circulation is the Fifty Pound note. A One Hundred Pound note was issued from 1725 to 1943 and was withdrawn in 1945. The Bank of England has no current plans to introduce a One Hundred Pound note in the foreseeable future. There is a Bank of England One Million Pound and One Hundred Million Pound note, but they are only for use between banks to back up the currency of banknote producing banks such as the Bank of Scotland, etc. Northern Ireland currently has a £100 note which is fairly common.