Countries that do not print paper money
View Cart / Checkout
The following countries do not currently print their own paper money. Instead, they use bills from another country or region. Below, after each country's name, is the type of currency being used.
American Samoa - US dollar Andorra - euro Ascension - Saint Helena pound British Virgin Islands - US dollar Chechenya - Russian rouble Dagestan - Russian rouble East Timor - US dollar Ecuador - US dollar El Salvador - US dollar Greenland - Danish krone Guam - US dollar Kiribati - Australian dollar Kosovo - euro Liechtenstein - Swiss franc Marshall Islands - US dollar Micronesia - US dollar Monaco - euro Montenegro - euro Nauru - Australian dollar Northern Mariana Islands - US dollar Palau - US dollar Panamá - US dollar Puerto Rico - US dollar Réunion - euro Saharan Arab Republic - Moroccan dirham Saint Pierre et Miquelon - euro San Marino - euro Seborga - euro Serbia & Montenegro - Yugoslavian Federal Republic Serbian Republic (Banja Luka) - Bosnia & Herzegovina convertible mark South Georgia - Falkland Islands pound Tatarstan - Russian rouble Tibet - Chinese Yuan Tokelau - New Zealand dollar Tristan da Cunha - Saint Helena pound Turks & Caicos Islands - US dollar Tuvalu - Australian dollar US Virgin Islands - US dollar Vatican City - euro
Note: Paper money from Ecuador, El Salvador, and Serbian Republic (Banja Luka), is still considered to be relatively easy for collectors to acquire.
In 2002, the following nations implemented a monetary union, with the euro as the new currency:
Austria Belgium Finland France Germany Greece Ireland Italy Luxembourg Netherlands Portugal Spain
Beginning in 2004, these countries ceased printing their own national currency bills:
Anguilla Antigua & Barbuda Dominica Grenada Montserrat Saint Kitts & Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent & The Grenadines
Country Index
|
View Cart / Checkout
|