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The New USD dollar $100 Bill

After a three-year delay, the new high-tech $100 bill enters circulation this fall. Here’s how it’s designed to beat the counterfeiters.


This image provided by the US Treasury Department April 24, 2013 shows the new face of the US $100 dollar note. The Federal Reserve Board on Wednesday...
HO / AFP - Getty Images
This image provided by the US Treasury Department April 24, 2013 shows the new face of the US $100 dollar note.
The new $100 bill: Same old face, with some high-tech tweaks meant to thwart counterfeiters.
After a three-year hiatus due to production delays, Americans will finally be getting the new $100 bill in their ATMs and bank accounts on October 8, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday.
The new bill will have several features the Fed says will make life difficult for counterfeiters, but should help retailers identify fakes.
They include a blue, 3-D security ribbon embedded with images of bells that change to the number 100 when you tilt the note back and forth. If you tilt it side to side, those images move up and down.
There also will be a Liberty Bell embedded in an inkwell on the face of the note. Both are copper colored until you tilt the note. Then, the bell will change from copper to green.
The Fed spells out all the cool features on its website. The $100 bill, the most widely-counterfeited U.S. note, was last redesigned in 1996. The Fed says you will not need to trade in your old $100 notes for the new ones.
One thing that isn't changing: Benjamin Franklin's visage will still be staring out at you as you help the U.S. economy by handing him over to a cashier. But he won't be winking.
 
 
The new $100 bill is outfitted with a 3D security ribbon.
newmoney.gov
C
ome October, when you go to the ATM each morning to take out your daily stack of $100 bills (and really, who doesn't do this?), don't be alarmed if you don't recognize the crazy pieces of paper that come flying out.
Those will be the Fed's new $100 bills — a project Uncle Sam has been chipping away at since 2003. The new Benjamins were originally scheduled for circulation starting in February 2011, but the agency was forced to postpone that because of problems including "unwanted creases," reports the Los Angeles Times.
Well, it was worth the wait. The new currency is loaded with high-tech features that will make it "easier for the public to authenticate, but more difficult for counterfeiters to replicate," says the Fed. And though the bill costs slightly more to produce than our current $100 note, it should save money in the long run — $100s are more frequently counterfeited than any other U.S. currency outside the United States. North Korea in particular is known for producing incredibly high-quality counterfeit $100s known as "supernotes," which are almost impossible to detect as fakes. This new bill should make "supernotes" extremely difficult to produce.
And don't worry about turning in the stack of old $100s under your bed. The billions of notes already in circulation will remain legal, but starting Oct. 8, they will be destroyed and replaced when they pass through the Fed. In the interest of preventing confusion at the cash machine, here's a quick look at the new $100:
New security features include:
1. A blue, three-dimensional security ribbon that's woven — not printed — into the note's fabric.
2. Another security strip to the left of Ben's face. It's only visible when held up to the light.
3. A faint image of Ben's face in the black space on the right, which can be seen on both sides of the bill.
4. Alternating images of bells and the number 100 that change as the viewing angle is tilted.
5. A liberty bell inside an inkwell that changes from copper to green when tilted.
6. A large "100" on the front that also changes color when tilted.
7. An even larger "100" vertically positioned on the back to help those with visual impairments identify the currency.
8. Raised "intaglio" printing throughout the bill to give the note its "distinctive texture."
9. Microprinting reading "The United States of America" on Ben's collar, "USA 100" on the watermark, and "ONE HUNDRED USA" along the golden quill.
Check out NewMoney.Gov for more info.