I have a jar with several hundred 1 and 2 euro coins, can I use them in France?
#16
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: UK. BAEC AAdvantage
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Posts: 3,650
If you are visiting London and go to Bank and then the Bank of England, you can change any old currency for new there. But that's if you, or your friend are going to it. Otherwise those charity boxes you see at airports might be an easy way to make some use of them.
#17


Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: NW London and NW Sydney
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New pound coins can just be spent. A minority of merchants don't accept cash but it isn't hard to find one that does.
If your UK friend has an account with a bank that has branches with tellers in a convenient location, then they should be able to easily deposit the old coins.
But high street banks have closed many branches in recent years, many people have accounts with branchless banks, and some branches only have machines for cash deposits, which stopped accepting the old pound coin in 2018.
#20
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Paris, France
Programs: Flying Blue, Accor Silver
Posts: 290
Of course not. Money in GBP/UKL has become worthless on the continent. (just kidding)
Dring my last trip to England I had 6 or 7 "old" pound coins that were losing their validity the following month; I spent them all at the airport and the cashier was quite unhappy to receive them but could not refuse them.
Dring my last trip to England I had 6 or 7 "old" pound coins that were losing their validity the following month; I spent them all at the airport and the cashier was quite unhappy to receive them but could not refuse them.
#21
Join Date: Mar 2023
Location: Under the Big Oak Tree
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France is not Sweden (yet), most people would not see finding nearly 500 euros that they didn't know about as a "problem".
If the British coins are the old round unimetallic type then they are a problem, as there is no government institution where you can exchange them and commercial banks will only exchange them for account holders.
If the British coins are the old round unimetallic type then they are a problem, as there is no government institution where you can exchange them and commercial banks will only exchange them for account holders.
#22
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Central Colorado
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Posts: 180
If you have just a few left on your way home:
If flying BA they go through the cabin asking for ANY currency for their charity. Even old non-spendable coins which can be melted down.
Some airports (in Scandinavia I believe) have places to donate coins for charity.
If flying BA they go through the cabin asking for ANY currency for their charity. Even old non-spendable coins which can be melted down.
Some airports (in Scandinavia I believe) have places to donate coins for charity.
#23

Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: New England
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Depending on where you are located in the US, you may or may not have a local big bank that also does business in the UK, and they may serve you in the UK with a foreign account if you flash their debit card. Santander is one of them. I believe HSBC is another one.
As for Euro coins, look for places that have self checkouts. If they take cash, self checkouts typically won't balk at the number of coins you put into them.
As for Euro coins, look for places that have self checkouts. If they take cash, self checkouts typically won't balk at the number of coins you put into them.
#24


Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: NW London and NW Sydney
Programs: BA Diamond, Hilton Bronze, A3 Diamond, IHG *G
Posts: 6,144
Strictly speaking, the BOE doesn't produce any coins.
On a trip to the UK awhile back I had some old-style one pound coins that weren't accepted in shops. I took them into a branch of a major bank at a London shopping mall, showed my Canadian passport and explained I was a visitor. The teller cheerfully exchanged them for me. To be fair, I had only a handful, not a few dozen. But she still did it even though I was not a client.
If you have just a few left on your way home:
If flying BA they go through the cabin asking for ANY currency for their charity. Even old non-spendable coins which can be melted down.
Some airports (in Scandinavia I believe) have places to donate coins for charity.
If flying BA they go through the cabin asking for ANY currency for their charity. Even old non-spendable coins which can be melted down.
Some airports (in Scandinavia I believe) have places to donate coins for charity.
Depending on where you are located in the US, you may or may not have a local big bank that also does business in the UK, and they may serve you in the UK with a foreign account if you flash their debit card. Santander is one of them. I believe HSBC is another one.
As for Euro coins, look for places that have self checkouts. If they take cash, self checkouts typically won't balk at the number of coins you put into them.
As for Euro coins, look for places that have self checkouts. If they take cash, self checkouts typically won't balk at the number of coins you put into them.
In France merchants are not obliged to accept more than 50 coins. I have come across this limit when paying at a place where the cashier is a human but coins go in a machine, after I put in 50 coins the slot closed.
#25
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Paris, France
Programs: Flying Blue, Accor Silver
Posts: 290
The Banque de France accepts the deposits of all of the shops in the area. Obviously, the coins must be in official rolls.
In the old days, when slot machines in casinos still used coins, they were happy to dump any number of coins into their counting machines. Now that they have moved on to paper tickets with bar codes, I wonder what happened to all of those machines.
In the old days, when slot machines in casinos still used coins, they were happy to dump any number of coins into their counting machines. Now that they have moved on to paper tickets with bar codes, I wonder what happened to all of those machines.
#26


Join Date: Nov 2012
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For those who say that paying a large bill with small coins can not be refused by the merchant in France, this is wrong. A merchant or service provider can refuse a payment by cash if this payment is done using more than 50 coins.
https://entreprendre.service-public....2%AC.,%2C%20SA...).
- Nombre de pices trop lev : le professionnel peut refuser tout paiement ralis avec plus de 50 pices.
Last edited by fransknorge; Sep 19, 23 at 10:10 am
#28
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Aug 2014
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Posts: 11,260
that was my experience as well.... I forgot the name of the bank, but it was a couple of minutes from the Paris Opera. I had probably 50 euro coins(1 or 2 euros). The lady looked at me and then at the coins... she started shaking her and said "NO"(in English). :
By the way, I think I have a bigger "problem" than I originally thought. Just finished counting the coins. Had no idea that the jar contained so many coins.
I have 476 euros in coins. (1 euro coins = 252... 2 euro coins = 112)
There were also around 30 one-pound British coins mixed in there somehow.
By the way, I think I have a bigger "problem" than I originally thought. Just finished counting the coins. Had no idea that the jar contained so many coins.
I have 476 euros in coins. (1 euro coins = 252... 2 euro coins = 112)
There were also around 30 one-pound British coins mixed in there somehow.
Just go to any small shop in France and ask them to change some for paper money, like 30-50 euro at a time.
#29
Join Date: Mar 2023
Location: Under the Big Oak Tree
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We were in London again last month and still had a few old-style one pound coins that we brought along with us. Brought them into a Lloyds Bank branch, explained that we were Canadian visitors and the teller happily changed them. We were in and out of the branch in under 10 minutes.
#30
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Join Date: Nov 1999
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And neither do most monetary authorities around the world for whatever (probably historical) reason. Coinage is issued "directly" by the government (through a mint) while notes are issued by the central bank.
Cite above is why the Bank of England (and other component countries of the U.K.) issues notes while the Royal Mint produces coins. I'm sure the same setup exists for most if not all of the E.U. member states. For France,Monnaie de Paris produces coins while Banque de France (well, through the ECB) issues notes. In the U.S., it's the Federal Reserve Bank (and issued not by a central bank but one of the several branches - Boston, NY, SF) and the U.S. Mint respectively (at least two remaining mints unit recently- Philadelphia and Denver)
Cite above is why the Bank of England (and other component countries of the U.K.) issues notes while the Royal Mint produces coins. I'm sure the same setup exists for most if not all of the E.U. member states. For France,Monnaie de Paris produces coins while Banque de France (well, through the ECB) issues notes. In the U.S., it's the Federal Reserve Bank (and issued not by a central bank but one of the several branches - Boston, NY, SF) and the U.S. Mint respectively (at least two remaining mints unit recently- Philadelphia and Denver)