10,000To put that into perspective, think of banded bundles of $100 bills you see in suitcases or duffel bags on T.V or in movies. You would need 10,000 bills to total 1 million dollars, which if stacked, would be a little over 3 feet high.
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.
A billion (one thousand million) is equal to: * the number of cubic millimeters in a cubic meter * the number of pennies needed to equal 10 million dollars * the number of dollar bills in a stack of bills almost 16 miles high * the number of American nickels in 200,000 tonnes of nickels * one seventh of the humans on Earth * half the number of bacteria on your skin
Approximately 358.33 feet tall.
A billion dollars in one dollar bills will make a stak that is roughly 68 miles high 1,000,000,000X.0043 = 4,300,000 inches. 4,300,000 inches/12=358,333.33 feet 358,333.33 feet/5280 (mile)= 67.86 miles So the answer is about 68 miles.
One million 1-dollar bills would be about 358.33 feet tall.
About 3 million feet.
Based on the research done here (http://www.cockeyed.com/inside/million/million.html) A million dollars worth of $100 bills makes a stack about 40 inches high! If you do the math, that means a Billion is 3,333 feet high and a trillion dollars would make a stack over 3 million feet tall or roughly 630 miles high!!!
The stack would be about 678.66 miles high.
Each bill is 0.0043 inches (0.11 mm) thick, and there are 10 million $100 bills in $1 billion. So 10 million bills stacked up would make a stack 43,000 inches -- or about 2/3 mile -- high.
10,000To put that into perspective, think of banded bundles of $100 bills you see in suitcases or duffel bags on T.V or in movies. You would need 10,000 bills to total 1 million dollars, which if stacked, would be a little over 3 feet high.
17 million one-dollar bills would stack to about 6,091.67 feet high.
1000 and thats stupidest question i have ever heard of
17.92' high, stacked in one pile.
Quite amazing: the stack of 60 million 1-dollar bills would be 4.07 miles (6.55km) high! Each US banknote measures 0.11mm thick when new.
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.
Assuming standard dimensions of a US pallet (48 inches by 40 inches), and considering that a single US bill measures 2.61 inches by 6.14 inches, you could fit approximately 3,448 bills on a pallet. Therefore, $1 million in 20 dollar bills would occupy around 172 pallets. This calculation does not account for the height of the stack of bills, which would depend on how the money is stacked.