From a large run of 3.2M notes printed in December 2016. Some collectors keep all the star notes they find, and some collectors only keep UNC star notes. If you collect strictly from circulation, I would say keep both of them.
I would keep them if I had found them. In fact, I would have asked the person that handed them to me if they had more and I would have added them as well. They only cost a dollar each so hold onto them.
Though *STARS* tend to be more rare, that doesnt mean you have hit a jackpot especially common FRN,S , Have several 57 $1 Silver Certificate *STARS* in Showroom condition, and the value isnt much more then a candy bar....LOL
i,m a star note addict. lol. i have THOUSANDS of them, all denominations.over 50 years of collecting them. only a few of them have some value(serial number odditys)but most don't.maybe i'll leave them to the grandkids or there's one lucky hooker in my future. lol.
Maybe you already know about this website, but in case you don't: http://www.mycurrencycollection.com/reference/star-notes/lookup
I remember back in the day needing to take out some money and when I took out 100 bucks I got 5 new consecutive serial 20 dollar star notes. So I took out the max (400 dollars back then) and decided to keep them in an envelope stored away in a safe. I need to check and see what they are worth. I think they brought me good luck as well over the years.
Since I rarely pay attention to the paper money tables at shows, what would a common serial number sell for, if they do. Could you get 1.25? 1.50? It's all but pointless to sell on ebay with the fees and such unless it's of a greater rarity. Just wondering if they sell at a show? I have about 30 give or take I am trying to get rid of.
I checked out the website above and here is the result. I’m not into paper money enough to save this note but would feel bad spending it if there’s collector interest. Are star notes more like 4 leaf clovers, hard to find but doesn’t really mean anything?