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2004 $20 Federal Reserve Notes Values By Grade
About These Price Ranges
The values shown below are for standard notes only, based on actual eBay and Heritage Auctions data.
IMPORTANT: If your note has any special features such as:
Its value could be significantly higher. Check the "Special Features Value Impact" section below to find your note's potential premium value.
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Special Features Value Impact
From modest premiums to jaw-dropping values—discover which special features can transform ordinary bills into prized collectibles. Explore each feature to see detailed price ranges organized by denomination, note type, and series—all based on verified auction and sales data.
$2 1976 Federal Reserve Star Note.
What are Star Note?
Replacement bills indicated by a star symbol at the end of the serial number instead of a letter. Printed to replace defective notes during production, they typically represent less than 1% of notes produced. Their relative scarcity compared to regular notes drives their premium value, especially for star notes from smaller print runs or those with fancy serial numbers, which can command significant collector premiums.
Value Chart By Note Denomination & Series
| Deno. | Series | Circulated | Uncirculated | Premium | Check Prices |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $20 | 2004 | $29.44 - $40.00 | $32.98 | $32.00 - $124.00 | Find SalesView |
Radar Serial Number 83522538 $1 1974 Federal Reserve Note
What are Radar Pattern?
Bills with serial numbers that read the same forward and backward (e.g., 12344321). Named for their palindromic pattern, these notes are highly valued by collectors for their mathematical perfection and symmetry. The bidirectional readability creates an instant visual appeal that stands out in collections.
Value Chart By Note Denomination & Series
| Deno. | Series | Circulated | Uncirculated | Premium | Check Prices |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $20 | 2004 | - | - | $69.00 - $76.47 | Find SalesView |
Low serial number D00000386A $5 1928 Federal Reserve Note
What are Low/High Serial Numbers Pattern?
Bills with low or high position serial numbers (first 1000 or last 1000 in a series, e.g., 00000000-00000999). Highly prized by collectors for their sequential extremes that represent the beginning or end of a printing run.
Value Chart By Note Denomination & Series
| Deno. | Series | Circulated | Uncirculated | Premium | Check Prices |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $20 | 2004 | - | $70.00 - $180.12 | $99.00 - $862.50 | Find SalesView |

* Very fine *
Got 2004 , $20 bills still in a treasury booklet , one for each mint, serial numbers under 1000. What can they be worth
That sounds like a much more interesting set than regular 2004 $20 bills. One small correction: paper money is issued by Federal Reserve districts, not U.S. Mint locations, so you likely have one note from each Federal Reserve Bank/district.
Serial numbers under 1000 can add collector interest, especially if the notes are still in the original Treasury/BEP booklet and the set is complete. The key factors are whether all notes are crisp uncirculated, whether the serial numbers match or are all very low, and whether the original packaging is intact.
At minimum, a 12-note $20 set has $240 in face value. A complete original low-serial set could be worth more, possibly in the few-hundred-dollar range or higher to the right collector. I would not spend these without first checking the booklet title, the exact serial numbers, and recent sold examples for similar BEP/Treasury 2004 $20 district sets.
Hi Alex I have a circulated 2004 $20 bill serial# EF83281770A F6 please review and let me know if there is any value.
Hi Christina — thanks for reaching out!
Quick take: your circulated 2004 $20 (district F6 Atlanta) with serial EF83281770A is most likely worth face value ($20).
Why there’s probably no premium
It’s not a star note (there would be a ★ after the serial).
The serial doesn’t hit the usual “fancy” patterns (not low, high, radar/palindrome, repeater, ladder, solid, or a clean birthday date).
In circulated condition, modern $20s almost always trade at face unless there’s a striking printing error.
When it could be worth more
A visible printing error (big overprint shift, missing ink, gutter fold, offset transfer, mismatched numbers).
Truly uncirculated quality (think crisp, no folds, no corner wear) sometimes brings a tiny premium.
Being part of a strap of sequential notes in gem condition.