A one-inch stack would contain about 233 bills.
17 million one-dollar bills would stack to about 6,091.67 feet high.
195 100-dollar bills would be 0.84 inches tall.
Extremely high: 5,157,828.28 miles.
Extremely high: approximately 882,260 miles high!
Very high: about 67.87 miles.
Approximately 67.87 miles high.
Approximately 67.866 miles high if they are in pristine condition.
Approximately 55,989.58 miles high (yes, really).
You'd better find a tall ladder: the stack would be 3,583.33 feet tall.
A one-inch stack would contain about 233 bills.
17 million one-dollar bills would stack to about 6,091.67 feet high.
If they are one-dollar notes, the stack would be 47.51 miles high.
8.6"
A US dollar bill is 0.0043 inches (just over 1/10 mm) thick, requiring nearly 233 dollar bills for a stack 1 inch high. A billion dollars in a vertical stack would then be 67.8 miles high. (4.3 million inches).
It depends on how many dollar bills you have! Lacking that variable, one US dollar is 0.0043 inches thick. So, a stack of one million dollars is about 358 feet four inches high.
One billion US currency bills would create a stack more than 67.8 miles high. The average thickness of the paper used is 0.0043 inches (about 0.11 mm). One billion bills (if they did not get further compressed by the weight) would reach a height of 4.3 million inches (67.866 miles).