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1935G $1 Silver Certificates 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.
Highest Records Sales
Exceptional sales that have set market records. View Full History >
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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1 | 1935G | $6.50 - $11.14 | $53.50 | - | Find SalesView |
1935G $1 With Motto Silver Certificate, Fr-1617
What are With motto “In God We Trust.”?
These anomalous bills feature the motto when they shouldn't have included it, representing production errors that escaped quality control. Collectors prize these notes for their production irregularity and their documentation of inconsistency in government printing processes, creating scarcity that attracts serious currency enthusiasts.
Value Chart By Note Denomination & Series
| Deno. | Series | Circulated | Uncirculated | Premium | Check Prices |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1 | 1935G | $19.48 - $37.00 | $29.00 - $99.00 | $54.00 - $1,410.00 | Find SalesView |
$1 1935-G Silver Fr. 1616 No Motto
What are No motto “In God We Trust.”?
These error notes lack the motto when it should have been present, representing oversight in the printing process. Their collection value derives from being production anomalies that document federal printing inconsistencies, offering tangible evidence of quality control failures in official currency manufacturing.
Value Chart By Note Denomination & Series
| Deno. | Series | Circulated | Uncirculated | Premium | Check Prices |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1 | 1935G | $4.50 - $21.24 | $18.00 - $40.00 | $38.00 - $557.75 | Find SalesView |
1950E Federal Reserve Note. The L-D block had a printing of roughly one-fourth of the L-C block
What are Special Block Identifier?
Bills with distinctive block lettering or numbering, excluding experimental or web notes. These represent specific production batches identified by letter-number combinations in the serial number. Collectors value certain rare blocks, replacement blocks, and final blocks of a series. Their significance lies in identifying specific production runs, with first and last blocks of a series or denomination often commanding the highest premiums.
Value Chart By Note Denomination & Series
| Deno. | Series | Circulated | Uncirculated | Premium | Check Prices |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1 | 1935G | - | $37.50 - $39.00 | $54.00 - $94.00 | Find SalesView |
