Dollar Bills Changing Nationwide Starting in 2025 – Here’s Why the Change Is Happening

By Allen

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Dollar Bills Changing Nationwide Starting in 2025 – Here’s Why the Change Is Happening

Counterfeiting bills has become almost a game for everyone involved. Governments do their best to protect their currency, whereas criminals use technology to their advantage to outwit, not the government, but other institutions that accept currency and may not be as up to date in the security measures in place to protect it.

However, this is why the US Bureau of Engraving and Printing (BEP) is constantly working to improve US Dollar designs so that they are “resistant to increasingly sophisticated counterfeit attacks” and to educate both businesses and consumers on how to avoid fake bills.

What to know about counterfeit bills

The first thing to know is that there are currently seven different denominations of US currency banknotes in circulation and in print: $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100. Other denominations were previously used and are still legal tender, but they are relatively uncommon, with the majority now in collections and far more valuable than their printed value.

The bills that are currently in print differ from other legal tender notes that are no longer active in that they are periodically destroyed when they become too damaged to remain in circulation, and they are redesigned on a regular basis, with changes made to improve their security rather than their appearance.

Redesigns to improve security are not a simple and easy process; rather, they are a series of processes that take place over time (according to the BEP, the last redesign required more than ten years of research and development) and are implemented gradually to ensure that all measures are accounted for and detectable by retailers and financial institutions that accept the majority of cash transactions.

The most recent denomination to receive a makeover was the $100 note, which was first issued on October 8, 2013, and the remaining active currency denominations will follow suit in a staggered pattern, with new releases occurring as follows: $10 (2026), $50 (2028), $20 (2030), $5 (2032) and $100 (2034)

Dollar Bills Changing Nationwide Starting in 2025 – Here’s Why the Change Is Happening
Source (Google.com)

The BEP states, “This sequence addresses risk mitigation and counterfeiting concerns.” However, no bill is 100% counterfeit-proof. The Advanced Counterfeit Deterrence (ACD) Steering Committee, which includes stakeholders from the BEP, the Federal Reserve Board, the Federal Reserve System, Treasury.

The US Secret Service, works hard to ensure that the new designs are difficult to replicate and that any counterfeit bill is identified and destroyed, but it is difficult to control given the volume of bills that change hands every day.

This is why education is so important, and why the redesign process is followed by years of optimization and integration testing before being successfully deployed into banknotes for public use.

It takes time to ensure that the government has enough new equipment or raw materials for full production, as well as that these substances are controlled in such a way that criminals find it difficult to obtain them in sufficient quantities to justify counterfeiting.

Following that, the BEP reminds Americans that “extensive acceptance testing is required to ensure they meet rigorous manufacturing and quality standards at production volumes.”

This is significant because, according to the US Department of Treasury, an estimated $70 million in counterfeit bills are currently in circulation. This may be an optimistic estimate, as some experts believe the amount is closer to $200 million given its global use as a reserve currency.

Finally, but not least, how to detect a counterfeit US dollar bill


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