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  1. The $10 note includes an embedded security thread that glows orange when illuminated by UV light. When held to light, a portrait watermark of Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton is visible from both sides of the note. In addition, the note includes a color-shifting numeral 10 in the lower right corner of the note.

  2. As of October 2022, the current plan was to release a new $10 bill in 2026, $50 bill in 2028, $20 bill in 2030 followed later by a new $5 then $100 notes later in the 2030s.

  3. The $10 Note. The $20 Note. The $50 Note. The $100 Note. All Circulating Denominations. Each note includes security and design features unique to how the denomination is used in circulation. The U.S. government periodically redesigns Federal Reserve notes to make them easier to use, but more difficult to counterfeit.

  4. For denominations $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100, the note position letter and number indicates in which position on a plate a note was printed. It is a combination of one letter and one number and can be found on the front of the note. In 2014, the BEP began printing $1 notes on 50-subject sheets.

  5. For information about the $10 note issued from 1914 - 1990, click here. All U.S. currency remains legal tender, regardless of when it was issued.

  6. ABOUT THE TEN: According to the Federal Reserve, there were 1.9 billion $10 notes in circulation as of December 31, 2014. The Fiscal Year 2015 Yearly Currency Order for the $10 note is 627,200,000 notes. The note is being printed at the Fort Worth, Texas facility.

  7. www.banknotes.rba.gov.au › australias-banknotes › banknotes-in-circulationRBA Banknotes: $10 Banknote

    RBA Banknotes: $10 Banknote. You are here: Home Australia's Banknotes Banknotes in Circulation $10 Banknote. $10 Banknote. Flip Banknote. What's on the new $10 banknote. The new $10 banknote has a range of innovative new security features designed to keep the banknote secure from counterfeiting.