The US paper currency (which is all the same size) is reportedly 0.0043 inches thick.
Thus 50000 * 0.0043 = 215 inches
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.
One hundred times the number of bills in the stack. Banks normally wrap bills in roughly half inch-high stacks of 100 bills each. Assuming that this is the size stack you are referring to, then there would be $100 x 100 = $10,000 in such a stack.
10,000 i guess
A one-inch stack would contain about 233 bills.
The stack would be about 678.66 miles high.
17 million one-dollar bills would stack to about 6,091.67 feet high.
Not much. Storing $50000 in hundred-dollar bills would require 500 bills. Current US banknotes are 0.11 mm thick on average so 500 would make a stack only 500 × 0.11 = 55 mm high. All bills have horizontal dimensions of 156 × 66.3 mm so you could easily hold the entire stack in one hand. For comparison, that's (very) roughly the volume of four packs of playing cards.
195 100-dollar bills would be 0.84 inches tall.
One hundred times the number of bills in the stack. Banks normally wrap bills in roughly half inch-high stacks of 100 bills each. Assuming that this is the size stack you are referring to, then there would be $100 x 100 = $10,000 in such a stack.
10,000 i guess
100 dollar bills would stack 44 inch high
Apx. $2,799,070.00
You'd better find a tall ladder: the stack would be 3,583.33 feet tall.
mad high son
$3.5T in $100 bills would be a little over 19,300 miles high. U.S. currency is about .0035" thick.