Background Paper currency by its very nature is frequently transferred from one person to another and represents an important medium for human contact with - and potential exchange of - microbes. In this pilot study, we swabbed circulating 1billsobtainedfromaNewYorkCitybankinFebruary(Winter)andJune(Summer)2013andusedshotgunmetagenomicsequencingtoprofilethecommunitiesfoundontheirsurface.Usingbasiccultureconditions,wealsotestedwhetherviablemicrobescouldberecoveredfrombills.ResultsShotgunmetagenomicsidentifiedeukaryotesasthemostabundantsequencesonmoney,followedbybacteria,virusesandarchaea.Eukaryoticassemblagesweredominatedbyhuman,othermetazoanandfungaltaxa.Thecurrencyinvestigatedharboredadiversemicrobialpopulationthatwasdominatedbyhumanskinandoralcommensals,includingPropionibacteriumacnes,StaphylococcusepidermidisandMicrococcusluteus.OthertaxadetectednotassociatedwithhumansincludedLactococcuslactisandStreptococcusthermophilus,microbestypicallyassociatedwithdairyproductionandfermentation.Culturingresultsindicatedthatviablemicrobescanbeisolatedfrompapercurrency.ConclusionsWeconductedthefirstmetagenomiccharacterizationofthesurfaceofpapermoneyintheUnitedStates,establishingabaselineformicrobesfoundon1 bills circulating in New York City. Our results suggest that money amalgamates DNA from sources inhabiting the human microbiome, food, and other environmental inputs, some of which can be recovered as viable organisms. These monetary communities may be maintained through contact with human skin, and DNA obtained from money may provide a record of human behavior and health. Understanding these microbial profiles is especially relevant to public health as money could potentially mediate interpersonal transfer of microbes.