Canadian 2 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup

Download for free $1 Bill Cliparts #52, download othes 1 dollar bill serial number value lookup for free. A 1986-issue Canadian $2 bill is worth just face value at the bank while carrying a slight premium from collectors. Rare variations of the bill have sold for at least $10,000 at auctions. The unique feature that increases the bill's value involves the signature change on the bottom front of the bill to reflect the incoming Bank of Canada. Two 1986 Canadian Two Dollar Bills - Sequential Serial Numbers Highway #2 South, East service road, Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, Canada 5% Federal Tax Applied to ALL invoices. Following these obviously fancy numbers, there is a whole range of bills that some might consider fancy: Birthday or anniversary bills. These are bills that have a serial number with a year, a date, or both. Something like 41969780 (with “1969” tucked away in the center) or 02141951 (Valentine's Day in 1951). People tend to like serial number ones on one dollar bills, serial number two on two dollar bills, and so on. Fancy serial numbers on rare notes will be worth more than the same fancy serial number on a common note.

You are: Home » Banknotes » Bank of Canada » Canadian banknotes from 1986 to 1991 » 2 dollars

2 dollars 1986 to 1991 values and prices

Issued in September 1986 and printed by both CBN and BABN, the $2 note was the second in the new series and features a portrait of the Queen engraved by Henry S. Doubtfire of De La Rue, based on a photograph by Anthony Buckley.

A small engraved vignette of the Parliament Buildings is adjacent to the portrait. The coat of arms on the face of each note in the series was also engraved. The back features two robins. Note the bar codes adjacent to the serial numbers on the reverse.

Price guide and values - 2 dollars 1986 to 1991

Canadian 2 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup

You can see the list of signatures on Bank of Canada's banknotes. To help you to know the meaning of grades such as G, VG, F, VF, EF, AU, UNC, etc., you can jump to the grading section.

Bonin-Thiessen

  • Circulated
  • Uncirculated
VarietiesAG-3G-4VG-8F-12VF-20EF-40AU-50
-$2.00$2.00$2.00$2.00$2.00$2.30
BRX 3520000 to BRX 3579999-$3.60$4.50$6.30$9.00$15.30$28.80
Replacement EBX-$2.70$3.60$5.20$6.80$8.60$13.10
VarietiesUNC-60UNC-62CUNC-63CUNC-64GUNC-65GUNC-66GUNC-67
$3.20$3.80$4.20$9.90$15.50$47.30$54.60
BRX 3520000 to BRX 3579999$51.50$54.00$56.00$60.50$62.00$64.00-
Replacement EBX$22.10$24.50$25.70$28.90$32.20$36.20$110
VarietiesSP-60SP-62SP-63SP-64SP-65SP-66SP-67
-------
BRX 3520000 to BRX 3579999-------
Replacement EBX-------

Crow-Bouey

  • Circulated
  • Uncirculated
  • Specimen
VarietiesAG-3G-4VG-8F-12VF-20EF-40AU-50
-$2.00$2.00$2.00$2.00$2.30$3.60
ARX 0000001 to ARX 1339999-$2.30$4.10$7.20$10.40$14.40$24.80
ARX 1400000 to ARX 2320000-$18.00$31.50$45.00$67.50$122$248
Prefixes AUG to AUN-$2.00$3.20$5.90$9.00$15.80$26.50
VarietiesUNC-60UNC-62CUNC-63CUNC-64GUNC-65GUNC-66GUNC-67
$6.80$7.50$7.90$14.00$20.10$47.40$128
ARX 0000001 to ARX 1339999$56.30$61.10$61.80$66.50$74.50$81.70$98.30
ARX 1400000 to ARX 2320000$450$509$540$630$720--
Prefixes AUG to AUN$67.50$73.90$77.10$78.50$80.00$86.80$101
VarietiesSP-60SP-62SP-63SP-64SP-65SP-66SP-67
$213$220-$240$250$260$300
ARX 0000001 to ARX 1339999-------
ARX 1400000 to ARX 2320000-------
Prefixes AUG to AUN-------

Thiessen-Crow

  • Circulated
  • Uncirculated
VarietiesAG-3G-4VG-8F-12VF-20EF-40AU-50
-$2.00$2.00$2.00$2.10$2.30$3.20
ARX 1260000 to ARX 1339999-$4.50$9.00$18.00$31.50$63.00$108
ARX 1400000 to ARX 2319999-$2.00$2.30$2.30$2.30$3.20$5.00
Prefix AUG-$3,600$5,400$9,000$11,300$13,500$19,800
Prefix AUH-$1,800$2,700$4,050$5,900$9,000$11,700
Prefix AUJ-$270$450$630$810$1,350$2,480
Prefix BBP-$2.00$2.00$3.60$5.40$12.20$20.30
Prefix BBX-$2.00$2.30$3.20$3.80$4.70$9.00
Prefixes AUK to AUN-$2.00$2.00$2.70$4.50$11.70$17.30
Prefixes BGA to BGZ - Large B or BB-$2.70$4.50$7.20$13.50$33.80$60.80
VarietiesUNC-60UNC-62CUNC-63CUNC-64GUNC-65GUNC-66GUNC-67
$7.00$10.80$13.90$17.70$21.60$27.40$57.60
ARX 1260000 to ARX 1339999$158$160$162$182$203--
ARX 1400000 to ARX 2319999$9.50$11.00$11.80$13.80$55.00$62.80$70.60
Prefix AUG$22,500$24,300$25,200$27,000$28,800--
Prefix AUH$13,500$14,700$15,300$16,200$18,000--
Prefix AUJ$3,600$6,000$7,200$8,100$11,000--
Prefix BBP$47.30$50.20$51.80$56.30$60.80--
Prefix BBX$14.40$15.60$20.10$20.90$21.60$53.40$69.10
Prefixes AUK to AUN$41.40$51.70$56.30$63.00$70.70$95.60$105
Prefixes BGA to BGZ - Large B or BB$84.00$96.70$101$109$117--
VarietiesSP-60SP-62SP-63SP-64SP-65SP-66SP-67
-------
ARX 1260000 to ARX 1339999-------
ARX 1400000 to ARX 2319999-------
Prefix AUG-------
Prefix AUH-------
Prefix AUJ-------
Prefix BBP-------
Prefix BBX-------
Prefixes AUK to AUN-------
Prefixes BGA to BGZ - Large B or BB-------

View the average prices of certified 1986 to 1991 sold at auctions »

You can also view the list of values for special serial numbers and errors and varieties.

Varieties and details

Prefixes BGA to BGZ - 1 large B & 1 small B or 2 large B

A difference can be seen on the B's of the serial numbers. Example:

Last update : Sunday, February 21, 2021


** Update**

Rare $2 bill may NOT be worth $20,000
Well, this is awkward.
Last night we told you about a rare $2 bill that was expected to sell for $20,000 at an auction. But we now offer a mea culpa. We were mistaken.
The first problem? The story was from 2012 – a speculative piece about a bill potentially worth $20,000 because the wrong officials signed it. The second issue? A noteworthy serial number. The 1986 bills with the serial numbers prefixes AUG, AUH and AUJ should have contained the signatures of Bank of Canada governor Gerald Bouey and deputy governor John Crow, but a few of them are signed by deputy governor Gordon Thiessen instead. We only told you about AUH.
Canadian 2 dollar bill 1986Finally, we speculated the bill could be worth $20,000. As it happens, the bill did actually sell at auction – but for only $10,000.
Owner of the Toronto Coin Expo Jared Stapleton told Kevin Newman Live the reason for the mistake on the bills was likely old sheets of paper made it into the new printing. We wish we could attribute ours to the same thing.
Stapleton said the current catalogue for money calculation lists bills $2 notes with these incorrect signatures at $20,000, but that doesn’t mean it will sell for that at auction.
Anyway, if you think you are sitting on a goldmine because you may have a $2 bill lying around your house, you may want to think again. There were only five of these bills remaining, now presumably down to four thanks to the sale. And Stapleton said by no means are $2 bills rare. A quick eBay search for $2 bills for sale shows most of them sell for between $1-3, plus $1.25 for shipping and handling.
Source
**Original Post**
Do you have the magical $2 bill?
Remember the days when you’d use your $2 bill to buy a can of pop and a bag of chips? Or a pack of gum and a scratch ticket and you didn’t feel like you had to carry a ton of bricks to do so? Well those days are gone but if you were like many who held on to those $2 bills when the new toonies came into effect, you may be $20,000 richer!
It’s been 19 years already, (can you believe it?), since we said good-bye to the $2 bill and hello to the ‘toonie’ coin. Once the two-dollar coin came about, printing of the two-dollar bill halted on February 18, 1996.
Canadian 'Toonie'
Now there are $2 bills floating around that could be worth $20,000!!! That’s incredible. That’s 10 thousand times their original market price! But it’s not just any $2 bill that’s worth the 20 Gs, (we couldn’t all be so lucky). It has to be from the 1986-series, with the letters “AUH” before the seven digit serial numbers below the picture… and oh, it has to be in MINT condition! I’ve heard on a local radio station, if it’s not in mint condition, you might still be able to fetch a couple grand for it.
Yes, I know. It’s time to start flippin’ those cushions, rummaging through old drawers, unearthing those god-awful clothes from the 80s to check pockets, cleaning out garages and attics… and isn’t it time for a spring car cleaning? Good luck!
Did you know…
One of the five still remaining $2 bill was sold in Toronto a few months back, with $20,000 as the starting price?

How Do I Know If My Canadian 2 Dollar Bill Is Worth Anything

Hence, this story isn’t something new as it was first mentioned back in 2012 on the Toronto Sun‘s website about the first rare, year-and-letter-combination $2 bill that went up for bidding in a Toronto auction put on by Geoffrey Bell Auctions.

1986 $2 Queen Elizabeth note
Estimated value: $15,000-$20,000
More Info: This $2 bill of the last series the Bank of Canada issued before $2 coins replaced currency of that denomination looks like thousands of others that survived, but its AUH6303352 serial number ranks it as one of only five known with that combination of letters. Considered the finest-known, although not uncirculated, it will be hotly bid on at this weekend’s Geoffrey Bell Auctions that coincides with the Toronto Coin Expo. Those with Thiessen-Crow signatures were supposed to be issued starting with AUK letters, but some have been found in series AUG to AUN.
(photo supplied by Geoffrey Bell Auctions)

Canadian 2 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup Location


Source
'Some people are content with low-grade older bills, but condition is often rough because “you’re dealing with a paper product and they can get damaged and soiled easily,” Stapleton said Wednesday. Anyone seeking currency and coins for investment should “collect the best.” Such guidelines can pay off. - Canadian Paper Money Society vice-president Jared Stapleton (Toronto Sun)

Also, Did You Know…

How To Look Up Dollar Bill Serial Number


Canadian 2 Dollar Bill Serial Number Lookup By Name

  • A 1911 $500 bill featuring Queen Mary, wife of King George V, was saved from being shredded with old documents when the late owner’s relative spotted what turned out to be one of only three survivors. It sold for $322,000 four years ago.
  • Brian Bell, of Geoffrey Bell Auctions sold a 1925 King George V $500 note in 2010 for $235,750.
  • The Bank of Canada took over release of all Canadian currency by the mid-1940s, compensating institutions for their bills as customers exchanged them for federal equivalents. A rare set of its 1935 first issue $1-to-$1,000 specimen notes in both English and French, with “00000” serial numbers, is estimated to be auctioned for up to $150,000.