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.
100 hundred dollar bills is more money. 900 ten-dollar bills is a bigger stack of paper.
195 100-dollar bills would be 0.84 inches tall.
The answer depends on how big a stack. Also, a stack of mint bills tends to occupy less height than used ones.
1000000/100 = 10000, that is you would have a stack of 10,000 hundred dollar bills.
A banded stack, like at the bank? $100.
100 hundred dollar bills is more money. 900 ten-dollar bills is a bigger stack of paper.
$50,000
100
8.6"
50 bills to a stack, so $5 *50 = 250
195 100-dollar bills would be 0.84 inches tall.
The answer depends on how big a stack. Also, a stack of mint bills tends to occupy less height than used ones.
1000000/100 = 10000, that is you would have a stack of 10,000 hundred dollar bills.
A banded stack, like at the bank? $100.
50x50=2500
Stacks come in different sizes.
A stack of 100 one hundred-dollar bills is approximately 0.43 inches thick. This thickness can vary slightly depending on the condition of the bills, but on average, a single bill is about 0.0043 inches thick. Therefore, multiplying by 100 gives you the total thickness for that stack.