It doesn't "expire." It's always legal tender, however long you keep it. The Treasury Department removes all denominations of currency from circulation when they become damaged due to use.
is this a joke?
Banks are also supposed to turn in certain outdated notes for destruction regardless of condition. I've heard that if a bank ever gets anything over $100, a gold or silver certificate, or a US Note (with a red seal) they're supposed to send it to the Fed for destruction. They're usually worth more on the collectors market though.
Anything over $100 is not supposed to be in public circulation. They were printed for large sums to be circulated between banking institutions.
I have some “expired” $1 and $2 Canadian bills. I read that they’re still valid, but most merchants in Canada won’t accept them. I’d have to exchange them at a bank for coins.
The US is unusual that all legal tender ever issued by the federal government is still valid, most countries have a period of time you must swap your old bills/coins for new before the old loose all value other than as a collectible.
What made you look or ask the question?
The ask is more interesting than the thing being asked.
They truly lost their legal tender status. I guess if you had enough you could exchange them for larger bills.
As of January 1, 2021, the $1, $2, $25, $500 and $1,000 bills from every Bank of Canada series are no longer legal tender.
I guess it's really weird how it gets handled. If a retailer really wanted to accept one, they could, knowing that they can just exchange (or deposit it) at a bank. I heard in the UK it's actually illegal for a retailer to accept a "withdrawn" banknote. They want to shunt all of the exchanges to banks.
no legitimate question I have cash I am holding on to in case I come across a vendor that does not take Apple Pay but even small business take it kinda surprises me
My stash of expired Canadian bills totals $7. Two $2 and three $1, so hardly worth the effort of exchanging them. I’m keeping them as souvenirs. There are also several Canadian pennies.
It’s probably time for the US to retire $1 and the rarely seen $2 bills. And pennies and nickels for cash transactions.