No, the largest bill in production today is the $100 bill. Also, the $100 bill is the highest denomination in circulation today. There used to be $500, $1,000, $5,000, $10,000, and $100,000 bills, all of which are now obsolete. The 100,000 dollar bill was used only for financial transactions and is illegal to own today while the $500 - $10,000 denominations were printed for the public, although banks primarily used them. Unfortunately for you, banks stopped carrying the bills above in July 1969 (The $100,000 effectively disappeared well before then), so that means neither BB&T nor Wells Fargo have a 500 dollar bill. If you want a 500 dollar bill, I would suggest that you check a coin dealer near you or online. Try donckelly.com, kdcurrency.com, or thecurrencyhouse.com
Edit to Mr. Smartpants:
The bills were last printed during World War II, not during the 1930's
Not for circulation. There may be a bank somewhere that has possession of a $500 bill but I doubt they would sell it for $500.
In fact the highest denomination of currency in the u.s. is a $10,000 bill. They also printed 500, 1000 and 5000 dollar bills.
A $100,000 bill was minted for use between banks and large financial orginizations.
Some of those bills are out there somewhere.
There were once $500 and $1000 bills. They were last printed in the 30s, and you probably could never own one and carry it around and spend it like money. They were used by banks to transfer large amounts of funds, in those days. Today it's all done with computers so there's no need for such large bills. Today if you had a bill like that it would be just a collector's item.
No, the $100 is the largest denomination printed by the US mint.
I heard that bbt and Wells Fargo have them. Is this true?