THE APEX TIMES
President Donald Trump posts image of $100 bill bearing his signature, Treasury officials say currency is planned for the U.S. Semiquincentennial
The image, posted July 3 on Truth Social, shows the sitting president’s signature on a redesigned $100 note, according to reporting. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach later commented on the change and said it is intended to recognize the country’s 250th birthday.
President Donald Trump posted a photo of a redesigned $100 bill bearing his signature on Truth Social on July 3, the first publicly shared look, according to reporting. Trump did not add text to the post. The image circulated alongside comments from U.S. Treasury officials that tied the redesign to the nation’s 250th birthday, known as the Semiquincentennial.
Several outlets reported that the sitting president’s signature would appear on U.S. paper currency for the first time. Reporting described the update as a shift from earlier $100 designs that displayed the signatures of the Treasury secretary and the treasurer of the United States, but not a sitting president’s mark on the note.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said publicly that it was appropriate for the Semiquincentennial. In comments reported by CNN, Bessent said the change would provide “the most powerful way” to recognize the administration’s economic achievements and said the redesign should be issued to honor the 250th birthday. Bessent’s remarks were attributed to a social media post made after Trump’s Truth Social entry.
U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach also commented on the proposed rollout. In reporting summarized by CNN, Beach said the Treasury looks forward to the $100 notes “soon be in circulation,” referring to the notes that include the president’s signature above Bessent’s printed name and office on the bill’s design.
The July 3 posting by Trump came after Treasury Department action earlier in 2026, according to CNN’s account. CNN reported that, in March, the administration announced plans to feature Trump’s signature on U.S. currency as part of the Semiquincentennial commemoration. Zero Hedge’s report likewise framed the July 3 post as the first look at the currency with Trump’s signature.
While the image identifies the president’s signature as part of the $100 note design, the reporting does not provide a full timeline for when newly printed notes will begin circulating nationwide or describe the production and distribution schedule for financial institutions. The Treasury Department’s planned process for currency redesign and issuance typically involves multiple steps under federal authority, but the specific implementation dates and operational details were not included in the items reviewed for this story.
The appearance of a sitting president’s signature on U.S. paper currency also highlights the public communications role of the Treasury and the administration as the bill’s design is unveiled. The practical effect described in the reporting is primarily informational at this stage, with the stated goal of issuing the commemorative $100 notes during the Semiquincentennial period, and with Treasury officials treating the redesign as an acknowledgment connected to the nation’s 250th anniversary.
Why It Matters
- The redesigned $100 note would represent a change in how signatures on U.S. paper currency are displayed, adding a sitting president’s signature to the bill’s design.
- Treasury officials tied the redesign to the Semiquincentennial, making the timing and issuance part of how the federal government marks the country’s 250th anniversary.
- The rollout affects cash handling by financial institutions and retailers, since newly issued notes generally enter circulation gradually rather than all at once.
- The disclosure underscores how the Treasury and the White House are using major national milestones to frame federal commemoration through currency design, according to the statements attributed to Treasury officials.
- If implemented as described, the change would require coordinated production and distribution planning by Treasury and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, though specific dates were not provided in the reviewed reports.
Key Facts
- President Donald Trump posted an image of a redesigned $100 bill bearing his signature on Truth Social on July 3, with no additional caption, according to reporting.
- Zero Hedge reported that the image was the first paper currency to be signed by a living president.
- CNN reported that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach commented on the redesign after the July 3 post.
- CNN reported that the administration announced in March that Trump’s signature would appear on U.S. currency as part of the Semiquincentennial commemoration.
- Bessent’s comments, as summarized by CNN, linked the change to the Semiquincentennial and described it as appropriate to issue the currency at that milestone.
- Beach’s comments, as summarized by CNN, said the Treasury expects the $100 notes to be “soon be in circulation.”