Federal Reserve Notes Market Value
Current market statistics for 208,948 Federal Reserve Note listings.
What you'll usually pay
💡 Buying used saves about 17% here.
👉 In short easy summary
High value is concentrated in higher denominations and older years, with $100 notes seeing a 418% delta and 1928 notes a 361% delta. Conversely, $1 notes and circulated bills show significant negative deltas of -66% and -55% respectively.
💚 Best value for your money
Price by denomination
Why? Value scales with face value, ranging from $1 (9.5 median) to $100 (145 median).
Price by year
Why? Older currency commands a premium, with 1928 notes (129 median) significantly outperforming 1976 notes (22 median).
Price by circulated/uncirculated
Why? Condition impacts price, with Unknown status (48.69 median) higher than Circulated (12.5 median).
Price by grade
Why? Professional grading increases value, with Grade 65 (110.5 median) far exceeding Ungraded (13.99 median).
🛒 Some on sale right now
Common questions
What is the median price for a $1 Federal Reserve Note?
The median price for $1 notes is 9.5.
How does the price of 1928 notes compare to 2013 notes?
1928 notes have a median price of 129, while 2013 notes have a median price of 24.98.
What is the price difference between ungraded and Grade 65 notes?
Ungraded notes have a median of 13.99, whereas Grade 65 notes have a median of 110.5.
How we got these numbers
Worked out from 200 live eBay listings (price range $4–$296, odd outliers ignored). These are asking prices, so use them as a guide. Last checked July 16, 2026.