Foil Bill banknote
A Foil Bill is a collectible, non-circulating novelty item designed to look like U.S. paper currency but printed on metallic foil instead of paper. It is not legal tender. It is marketed primarily as a souvenir, commemorative, or gift item.
Here is what defines it.
What a Foil Bill Is
A Foil Bill is typically:
- Printed on aluminum or polyester metallic foil
- Sized to match U.S. currency (e.g., $1, $2, $100 format)
- Decorated with:
- U.S. presidents
- Patriotic imagery
- Religious or inspirational messages
- Trump, Biden, military, or historical themes
- Gold- or silver-colored finishes
Common versions include:
- “Gold $100” bills
- Trump Foil Bills
- Jesus or Biblical verse Foil Bills
- Commemorative U.S. Constitution or Liberty bills
Legal Status
Foil Bills are legal to own and sell if they follow U.S. counterfeiting law.
They must:
- Be clearly marked “NOT LEGAL TENDER.”
- OR be visually different enough from real money that no reasonable person would try to spend them
They cannot:
- Be used as money
- Be passed as real currency
- Closely replicate both sides of a real bill in size, color, and design
Legally, they fall under novelty currency, similar to play money or souvenir bills.
Why People Buy Them
Foil Bills are sold as:
- Gifts
- Political or religious memorabilia
- Collectibles
- Conversation pieces
- Wallet keepsakes
- Promotional giveaways
They are popular at:
- Gun shows
- Political rallies
- Tourist shops
- Online stores (Etsy, eBay, Amazon, conservative and religious retailers)
Value
A Foil Bill has no monetary value beyond what someone will pay for it as a novelty.
Typical prices:
- $1 to $10 per bill
- Some limited or themed versions may reach $20–$40 if collectible
They are not rare, not precious metal, and not investments.
Why They Exist
Foil Bills exist because:
- They look flashy and “gold-like.”
- They feel more substantial than paper
- They are cheap to mass-produce
- They appeal to patriotic, political, or religious audiences
They are designed to look valuable, even though they are not.

