Great hack from Cy Tymony's piece in Make magazine.
Here's what he wrote:
"Legitimate [U.S.] currency has iron particles in the ink. Fold a bill so half of it stands up vertically — if the top edge moves toward your magnet, it's the real deal. If not, phone the Secret Service!"
I sent my crack research team out back to our skunk works to check this out.
You know how skeptical we are around here.
But I digress.
Sure enough, Tymony's tip is spot-on.
But in order to shorten your learning curve (I realize how busy you are), let me note that the fridge magnet will demonstrate its attractive effect only within approximately 1/8" (2-3mm) of the bill.
So just holding up a magnet and expecting a bill in someone's bag or wallet across the room to explode out is asking a bit much.
Also — the effect is not demonstrable if there is an appreciable air current in the vicinity.
Do not attempt this maneuver on a windy hilltop and then say I'm so wrong.
Try it indoors, then say it.

It does work. I used a more powerful magnet out of a hard drive, and it moved perceptibly though very little. You must get very close. It didn't appear on the $1 bills I had, but larger ones also have a fluorescent stripe in the paper that shows under a UV light.
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