We would need more info. then that. What district is it from? it should say in the circle to the left of the portrait. And preferably a scan so we can tell you the condition and value if you want.
I'm new with money although I have lots of valuable coins,bills, etc . But explain is the district like the one surronding the letter e.g G
Yes right underneath it it should say the state is was printed in. But G should be Chicago. The bill in XF has a catalog value of $15 and $50 in uncirculated.
Welcome to CT, Amrase! In order to give you any more info on your note, you'll have to post a picture or scan. Without being able to see your note, all we can tell you is that you have a ten dollar bill. (and can't really be sure of that, either.)
All coins and paper currency has condition / grades. XF is considered Extremely Fine, in order for you to determine the value of your notes and coins you need to know how to grade. Here is a site a fellow member gave me to learn more about grading and paper currency, hope it helps. link
Is there anyway you could post an image of the note? Without see it...we can't gauge it's condition or value.
I don't know if you are still checking in on this thread. I understand sometimes it is hard to post a photo. If you can't do that...can you answer these two questions: First, did you find the note in circulation? If so, I assume the note is not perfectly crisp like a brand new note. Next, what is the serial number (including all letters and symbols)?
I got it when I got change at The Henry Ford museum . I'm not sure they did that to "go back" but I doubt it, maybe it was a mix up . It was Perfectly crisp for some reason as if it was paper etc , I have it in a concealed "container" if you may, also explain the serial number I have an idea of what it is but just to be sure .
At the very least, give us the series date and the entire serial number (first and last letter and all 8 digits in between).
It's most likely real. It comes from a run of 35,200,000 notes. Issued from the Chicago branch of the Federal Reserve Bank. It must be in Extra Fine condition or better to have even a small premium. Without a picture, no one here can advise you of the condition of your note.
There's a lot of people asking for pics, but here's the likely scenario. Your note is worth $10 to a dealer, and a collector will pay anywhere from $10-15 for the note, with $15 being probably too high. That's my guess.