In the US it was the $100,000.00 bill designed for use between branches of the Federal Reserve, and not for routine circulation.
Answer
In terms of number composing the amount
I think it is the 100.000.000.000.000 marks note released at the end of 1923 during the great depression and inflation in Germany.
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The largest denomination note released for circulation was for $10,000. The largest denomination ever printed was a small group of $100,000 gold certificates printed in 1934 and 1935; these were only used for transferring money between government departments.
No. The largest denomination the U.S. ever printed was $100,000. Any million dollar bill you might find is a novelty only worth its weight in paper.
Exactly none. There is no federal bank called the US Bank, and the largest bill ever printed by the United States was worth $100,000.
It's worth a few cents for the paper it's printed on, because it's not a genuine US bill - it's a well-known novelty item available online and in gift shops. There's never been a 1 million dollar bill. The largest US bill ever printed for circulation was $10,000, and the largest ever printed (but not circulated) was $100,000.
$10,000 was the largest-denomination US bill ever printed for circulation. They were last issued in 1945 when $10,000 was a substantial yearly salary so very few of them were ever used. The largest bill ever printed was the Series 1934 $100,000 gold certificate, but these were only used for transactions within the Federal Reserve System. There's more at the Related Link, below