I have two interesting bills both 2009 $1 bills one has serial 02450245* and the other has the serial 62255776.
No one can track values without knowing the letters at the beginning and end of each serial number...
Ah, ha! And a star note to boot. Looks nice and clean, good borders. Can't say how much you could get, don't have my book handy right now but the star repeater will carry some premium. The other I can't say. Some collect poker numbers but I don't know of any four pair card game off hand.
The star may be worth $25, mainly due to condition and being a repeater AND star. I do not know much about paper money, or fancy notes though.
I just grabbed my book and it was the 28th edition of the Standard guide so I can't be of much help on this, soooo out dated,sorry.
They're worth some money, but when I placed a couple of star notes on ebay for sale I was shocked to get such a low price for a couple of totally uncirculated bills. Check the prices on ebay, I think it really depends how many star notes were printed during the subject date, also none of mine were repeaters. Look on ebay and you'll get a good idea, watch an auction for 7 days. That's one way to do it.
The 2009 $1 Atlanta Star is from a run of 3,200,000 notes, and is quite common. It is also a repeater, which will add a modest premium. The other note has an insignificant serial number, and I'd say say face value on that one. The OP called it a Great Note......I would call it a nice note, but not a great note. I'm never sure what to think when I see threads "What is this worth ?" Is the OP just looking for opinions from other members, or are they lacking research skills and general experience with paper money. Members opinions are sometimes conflicting and/or confusing because of what each of us find as valuable. A collector of large size notes would value your star note close to face value. I collect modern star notes, but don't care much for radars & repeaters, so I would value your note around $10 to $15. Get two collectors competing in an auction that really want your note, and it might fetch more.
....as an added reply, when searching eBay or any other auction site, SOLD items carry much more weight then do asking prices (Buy it Now) or current unsold auctions.
Never believe a "Buy It Now" price when you see it listed with "Best Offer". I have made offers of 50% of the "Buy it Now" price and purchased the item. I have seen where the "Buy It Now" price, when cut in half, is still higher than full retail found in publications like the Redbook. It's Fantasy-land and a real suckers ploy if you don't know anything about it's real worth. I reported an eBay listing asking $750 Buy It Now, for a full set of Sand's Casino Chips up to $25,000. It was a Bourland remake you could buy elsewhere for $24.95. This was more fraud than anything else, but this is the type of thing you can run into believing "Buy It Now " prices are legit.