Anti-Counterfeiting Money

Chemists and Security Scientists Add New Technology to Redesigned Five Dollar Bill

September 1, 2008

Anti-counterfeit experts added several security measures to a recently released new five dollar bill. They added more detailed watermarks, embedded a security thread containing over 650,000 tiny glass domes, and used light purple ink that fades to gray at the edges of the note in an effort to make the bills more difficult to duplicate.

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FOILING COUNTERFEITERS: The United States Treasury released newly designed five dollar bills on March 13, 2008, following changes to the ten, twenty, and fifty dollar bills. The changes include several innovations intended to increase the difficulty of printing counterfeit bills. These include larger watermarks and difficult-to-reproduce tiny type called microprinting, as well as an embedded security thread that glows blue when exposed to ultraviolet light.

OTHER DESIGN CHANGES: The general design of the bill has also been changed. The border around Abraham Lincoln's portrait has been removed, and now a field of stars borders it. Purple ink has been added, bright in the center, fading to gray near the edges. In addition, a field of small yellow numbers representing the value of the bill, "05", has been printed on the left front side of the bill. The reverse features a large number five in the lower right corner, printed in high contrast ink to assist people with vision impairments in identifying the bill.

The Optical Society of America contributed to this report. This report has also been produced thanks to a generous grant from the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc.

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Patricia K. Pincus
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