Canadian 1 dollar banknotes of 1967. A second version of this commemorative banknotenote, featuring the dates 1867-1967 in place of the serial numbers, was also issued. Find out more about known asterisk and replacement 1967 Confederation banknotes. Canadian 1 dollar banknotes of 1967 serial numbers ».
- 10 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup Value
- Us Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup
- 2 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup
- The last letter of the serial number or suffix letter identifies the number of times that the Bureau of Engraving and Printing used the sequence of serial numbers A is the first time, B is the second time, C is the third time and so on. With one run for each letter of the alphabet (26) and 32 bill per run, there are a total of 832 bills per.
- Serial numbers contain 8 numerical digits. The 1st letter preceding the serial number corresponds to the Federal Reserve Bank branch that printed the bill (A = Boston, B = New York, and so on). The 2nd letter refers to the number of times that serial number has been used, with A representing the 1st time, B the 2nd, and so on.
- Cool Numbers analyzes a dollar bill serial number (or any 8-digit numbers) for cool patterns, and reports the probability associated with various patterns.
- Serial numbers X9999999 - $1 Federal Reserve Notes 099999 399999 7999999 Trailing 0s - $1 Federal Reserve Notes 88888800. 0-1 binary serial numbers - $1 small size Silver Certificates 01000000 Serial numbers 9999999 - any size/type/denomination.
Bank of Canada serial number database
List all prefixes and possible serial numbers for each denominations and signatures of Bank of Canada banknotes. You can also find out more about:
- Known asterisk and replacement 1954 devil's face banknotes.
- Known asterisk and replacement 1954 modified portrait banknotes.
- Known asterisk and replacement 1967 Confederation banknotes.
- Known asterisk and replacement 1969 to 1975 banknotes.
Canadian banknotes of 2018 to 2020
The 10-dollars banknote started with prefix FTW.
Canadian 10 dollars banknotes of 2017
This commemorative banknote started with CDA and ended with the rarer prefix CDF.
Canadian 20 dollars banknotes of 2015
This commemorative banknote started with FWS and ended with the rarer prefix FWW.
Canadian banknotes from 2011 to 2018
Canadian banknotes of 2001 and 2002
Canadian banknotes from 1986 to 1991
Extremely rare prefixes include: 2 dollars Thiessen-Crow AUG, AUH and AUJ, 5 dollars Bonin-Thiessen HNB, Crow-Bouey EPW and Thiessen-Crow GOG.
Canadian banknotes of 1979
Canadian banknotes from 1969 to 1975
Find out more about known asterisk and replacement 1969 to 1975 banknotes.
Canadian 1 dollar banknotes of 1967
A second version of this commemorative banknotenote, featuring the dates 1867-1967 in place of the serial numbers, was also issued.
Find out more about known asterisk and replacement 1967 Confederation banknotes.
Canadian banknotes of 1954 without the devil's face
Find out more about known asterisk and replacement of 1954 modified portrait banknotes.

Canadian banknotes of 1954 with the devil's face
Find out more about known asterisk and replacement of 1954 devil's face banknotes.
Canadian banknotes of 1937
Canadian banknotes of 1935
Disney Dollar Serial Numbers
Every Disney Dollar with a serial number is unique within its series and denomination. Proofs don't have serial numbers because they are from pre-production test printings.The serial number always includes a prefix letter and a number. Some notes also have a suffix.
The Prefix is the letter that begins the serial number. It indicates the original source of the note, as shown here:A, B or E Disneyland
D, F Disney World
T Disney Stores
This can greatly affect the value of a note. For example, the 1997 Simba from Disney World is much harder to find than the Disneyland version. The price reflects that.
The Suffix doesn't affect value. Many Disney Dollars have serial numbers ending in 'A'. The 2011 Pirates end in E, D or F, depending upon which ship is featured. They don't vary within a series, so they don't matter.
The Number can affect the value of the note. Examples include:
10 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup Value
- Low number – 0000022 would be more desirable than 0133325
- Date - 00121594 might have a special meaning, a birthday for example
- Binary– a serial number with 1’s and 0’s, but no other numbers, for example 0011100
- Radar – a serial number that is the same in either direction, for example 01344310
- Repeater – serial number made up of a repeating sequence, i.e. 01550155
A Matched Set includes one note for each denomination, all with the same serial number. For example, a $1, $5, and $10 set might all have serial number A0001448. Matched sets from some years are particularly hard to find, because they were only given to Disney cast members. Other matched sets were sold at Disney parks or put together by collectors.