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Slovenian tolar

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The tolar is the currency of Slovenia. It is divided into 100 stotinov. The ISO 4217 currency code for the Slovenian tolar is SIT. The name tolar comes from Thaler, and is cognate with dollar.

History

The tolar was introduced on 8 October 1991. It replaced the 1990 version of Yugoslav dinar at par. On 28 June 2004 the tolar was pegged against the euro in the ERM II [link], the EU's exchange rate mechanism. The first banknotes were provisional payment notes issued on 8 October 1991 and had a bee on the obverse and Triglav, the tallest mountain in Slovenia, on the reverse, these notes ceased to be issued when the current banknotes were released in 1992. All recalled banknotes can be exchanged at the central bank for current issue.

Future

On January 1, 2007, the tolar is to be replaced with the euro; Slovenia will issue its own euro coins, like all other nations in the Eurozone.

The timescales for conversion from the tolar to the euro will operate differently from the first wave of EMU. The permanent EUR/SIT conversion rate was fixed on July 11, 2006 at 239.640 SIT per EUR. During the first wave of EMU, this period was only a day (the conversion rates were fixed on 31 December 1998 and EUR non-cash payments were possible from 1 January 1999). Also unlike the first wave of EMU which had a three year transition period (1999-2001), there will be no transition period when non-cash payments can be made in both SIT and EUR. SIT will continue to be used for all transactions (cash and non-cash) until 31 December 2006 and EUR must be used for all payments (cash and non-cash) from 1 January 2007. However, as with the first wave of EMU, cash payments in SIT may continue until 14 January 2007, but change must be given in EUR.

Coins

The following coins are minted [link]. Typical animals are represented on the obverse side.

Banknotes

The following banknotes are printed [link]. All of them feature important Slovenians.

Historical exchange rates

Lower number indicates the tolar has a higher value.

See also

External links


Pre-euro and other EU currencies

Eurozone

Austrian schilling > Belgian franc | Dutch gulden | Finnish mark | French franc | German mark | Greek drachma | Irish pound | Italian lira | Luxembourgish franc | Monegasque franc | Portuguese escudo | San Marinese lira | Spanish peseta | Vatican lira
ERM II

Cypriot pound > Danish krone | Estonian kroon | Latvian lats | Lithuanian litas | Maltese lira | Slovak koruna | Slovenian tolar
Other EU

British pound | Czech koruna | Gibraltar pound | Hungarian forint | Polish złoty | Swedish krona
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Currencies of Europe
Eurozone

Euro
Northern

Danish krone > Faroese króna | Icelandic króna | Norwegian krone | Swedish krona
Baltic

Estonian kroon > Latvian lats | Lithuanian litas
Western

British pound | Guernsey pound | Jersey pound | Manx pound
Central

Czech koruna > Hungarian forint | Polish złoty | Slovak koruna | Slovenian tolar | Swiss franc
Eastern

Belarusian ruble > Kazakhstani tenge | Russian ruble | Ukrainian hryvnia
Southeastern

Albanian lek > Bulgarian lev | Bosnia and Herzegovina convertible mark | Croatian kuna | Macedonian denar | Moldovan leu | Romanian leu | Serbian dinar
Mediterranean

Cypriot pound > Gibraltar pound | Maltese lira | Turkish new lira
Transcaucasia

Armenian dram > Azerbaijani manat | Georgian lari
Unrecognized Countries

Transnistrian ruble
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