Stores not accepting large bills...

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MtnMan

Diamond Member
Jul 27, 2004
9,291
8,597
136
Problem is the government expects the business to turn in fake bills without exchanging it for a real one. Is the business supposed to eat the loss? Fake bills is a federal offense but the business is supposed to shoulder the burden?
Counterfeit detection pens can be found in every office supply store across the country.
or
Hold a bill up to a light and look for a holograph of the face image on the bill. Both images should match. ...
or
Looking at the bill through a light will also reveal a thin vertical strip containing text that spells out the bill's denomination.
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
69,735
13,351
126
www.betteroff.ca
I used a $100 bill to buy a McFlurry once. I was surprised they even took it. I was young, like probably elementary school or something, so I thought it was the most hilarious thing at the time.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
98,838
17,311
126
Counterfeit detection pens can be found in every office supply store across the country.
or
Hold a bill up to a light and look for a holograph of the face image on the bill. Both images should match. ...
or
Looking at the bill through a light will also reveal a thin vertical strip containing text that spells out the bill's denomination.


You know there are super counterfeits around right?
 

kranky

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
21,019
156
106
Counterfeit detection pens can only test the paper (which is actually not paper, but more like linen). If someone bleaches the ink off a $1 and reprints it as a $100, the pen won't help.

Cashiers ought to be trained to look at the watermark, the location and writing on the security strip and the color-shifting ink on high-denomination bills. It takes literally 2 seconds. But since businesses don't seem to bother training them, businesses will continue to refuse to accept big bills.

Back in the day I worked in a convenience store and they had no rule against taking big bills, but we were trained on how to verify them and if we ever took a fake we were told it would come out of our pay (a bluff, but effective). People didn't use them often but we didn't refuse to take them.

I help a friend who sells costly items at festivals and to my knowledge no seller has ever gotten stuck with a fake bill. Every seller inspects the high value notes and does so in a showy way - I don't think anyone would even try.
 

OutHouse

Lifer
Jun 5, 2000
36,410
616
126
Counterfeit detection pens can only test the paper (which is actually not paper, but more like linen). If someone bleaches the ink off a $1 and reprints it as a $100, the pen won't help.

Cashiers ought to be trained to look at the watermark, the location and writing on the security strip and the color-shifting ink on high-denomination bills. It takes literally 2 seconds. But since businesses don't seem to bother training them, businesses will continue to refuse to accept big bills.

Back in the day I worked in a convenience store and they had no rule against taking big bills, but we were trained on how to verify them and if we ever took a fake we were told it would come out of our pay (a bluff, but effective). People didn't use them often but we didn't refuse to take them.

I help a friend who sells costly items at festivals and to my knowledge no seller has ever gotten stuck with a fake bill. Every seller inspects the high value notes and does so in a showy way - I don't think anyone would even try.

I would love to know all the anti-counterfeiting measures that are in 100's that only the secret service know about.