How to Replace Damaged or Destroyed U.S. Currency
from the Tip Hero website
(http://tiphero.com/replace-damaged-currency/)
(http://tiphero.com/replace-damaged-currency/)
If your cash is just soiled or ripping at the corners, you should
still be able to use it, but if one of those bills is torn in half, you
will have to tape it together and bring it to your local bank. There, a
teller should be able to confirm its authenticity and add the money to your balance, or even replace it with an intact version.
BUT,
if your cash has been mutilated due to fire, water, chemical,
explosives damage, animal damage, or deterioration by burying–a.k.a. the
most common ways cash becomes severely blemished, according to the
Bureau of Engraving and Printing–then it’s time that you contact
the agency for help.
On its official government site, the BEP gives the following instructions to those who need their ruined cash replaced:
1.
Write down the amount of cash that was damaged, your contact info, and
an explanation of how the bills became damaged. Also, be sure to include
your bank account number, along with a routing number. If you’d rather
receive a check, including payee and mailing address information.
2.
Carefully place all of the mutilated cash that you have in the
envelope, making sure that the packing process doesn’t further damage
the bills.
3. Send as a certified package to:
Personal Delivery and Non-Postal Couriers, i.e. FedEx/UPS
Bureau of Engraving & Printing
MCD/OFM, Room 344A
14th and C Streets SW
Washington, DC 20228
USPS Delivery
Bureau of Engraving & Printing
MCD/OFM, Room 344A
P.O. Box 37048
Washington, DC 20013
4.
Wait for your claim to be processed. At this time the BEP is dealing
with a high number of currency claims, so it might take anywhere between
6 and 36 months to receive a final decision. Also, if the amount of
money that was damaged was particularly high, the BEP may decide to
contact law enforcement to help them confirm the authenticity of the
claim.
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