The Pound Sterling (GBP) is a unit of currency, similar to the dollar, franc, or rupee, that is the primary form of legal tender in the United Kingdom and its territories. One of the world's most valuable currencies, the British pound is also referred to as the sterling or (informally) a quid. When written, pound amounts are preceded by the symbol £. However, just as several countries in the Americas have their own version of the peso, several African and Middle Eastern countries also utilize a unit of currency known as a pound.
While the majority of British pounds are minted by the Bank of England, certain territories and regions are authorized to print their own versions of the pound sterling. As a result, each of the following locations uses its own local version of the pound: Scotland; Northern Ireland; the Crown dependencies of Jersey, Guernsey, Isle of Man (where local pounds are used alongside GBP); and a handful of British Overseas Territories (South Georgia & South Sandwich Islands, Saint Helena & Ascension, Gibraltar, Falkland Islands).
Country/Territory | Currency | $1 USD (17 Nov 2022) = |
---|---|---|
British Antarctic Territory | Pound sterling (GBP) | 0.84 GBP |
British Indian Ocean Territory | Pound sterling (GBP) | 0.84 GBP |
Egypt | Egyptian pound (EGP) | 24.51 EGP |
Falkland Islands | Falkland Islands pound (FKP)* | 0.84 FKP |
Gibraltar | Gibraltar pound (GIP)* | 0.84 GIP |
Guernsey | Guernsey pound (GGP)* | 0.84 GBP/GGP |
Pound sterling (GBP) | ||
Isle of Man | Manx pound (IMP)* | 0.84 GBP/IMP |
Pound sterling (GBP) | ||
Jersey | Jersey pound (JEP)* | 0.84 GBP/JEP |
Pound sterling (GBP) | ||
Lebanon | Lebanese pound (LBP) | 1507.50 LBP |
Saint Helena & Ascension | Saint Helenian pound (SHP) | 0.84 SHP* |
South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands | Falkland Islands pound (FKP)* | 0.84 FKP |
South Sudan | South Sudanese pound (SSP) | 130.26 SSP |
Sudan | Sudanese pound (SDG) | 569.25 SDP |
Syria | Syrian pound (SYP) | 2512.51 SYP |
Tristan de Cunha | Pound sterling (GBP) | 0.84 GBP |
United Kingdom | Pound sterling (GBP) | 0.84 GBP |
Notes: Currencies marked with * are pegged to the pound sterling and have the same monetary value, though they may not be accepted outside of their respective regions. GGP, IMP, and JEP are unofficial codes and may not appear on some lists of ISO codes.
The oldest currency still in constant use, the pound can trace its origins back to Anglo-Saxon England in the late ninth century (750-800), when 240 "sterlings" (pennies/pence) could be made from a "pound" of silver. After the Norman conquest of the 1060s-1080s, the value of a pound was established to be 20 shillings (240 pence). This measurement system was an evolution of a system introduced to mainland Europe by the Roman Emperor Charlemagne.
British pound coins were first introduced in 1489, during the reign of King Henry VII. The pound was "decimalized" in 1971, replacing the previous "shillings and pence" system with a new penny valued at 1/100th of a pound (so that 100 pennies equal one pound). Notably, even when the majority of countries in the European Union (including the entire Eurozone) transitioned to the euro as its shared unit of currency, the UK chose to continue using the pound.
In addition to the countries that currently use the pound, a significant number of countries exist that have previously used the pound at some time in their history, but today use a different currency. For a full list of the countries that have used the pound in the past, consult the table at the end of this page.
The United Kingdom is the most prominent country that uses pounds as its main form of currency, and the British pound sterling (GBP) is both the best-known pound and one of the most widely exchanged currencies in the world. As of October 2022, the pound sterling was the fourth-most-traded currency in the world, following the United States dollar, the EU euro, and the Japanese yen. Banknotes (paper bills) of pounds sterling appear in four denominations and colors: £5 (turquoise), £10 (orange), £20 (purple), & £50 (red) and feature a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II on the front, with portraits of Winston Churchill £5, Jane Austen, J.M.W. Turner, and Alan Turing on the reverse sides.
Denomination | Color | Front portrait | Flipside portrait |
---|---|---|---|
£5 | Turquoise | Queen Elizabeth II | Winston Churchill |
£10 | Orange | Queen Elizabeth II | Jane Austen |
£20 | Purple | Queen Elizabeth II | J.M.W. Turner |
£50 | Red | Queen Elizabeth II | Alan Turing |
The Egyptian Pound (abbreviated LE) was introduced in 1834 by order of a Persian khedive who was serving as the viceroy of Egypt at the time. Also called the geneih, the Egyptian pound supplanted Egyptian piastre as the country's main currency, although piastres remained in circulation as well (valued at 1/100th of a pound). From the start of World War I until 1962, the Egyptian pound's value was pegged to that of the pound sterling at 1EGP/1.06GBP. It was later pegged to the US dollar at 1EGP/2.30USD, but as of late 2022 is no longer fixed to any other currency.
Denomination | Color | Front portrait | Flipside portrait |
---|---|---|---|
25 PT | Blue | Ayesha mosque | Egyptian coat of arms |
50 PT | yellow-orange | Al-Azhar mosque | Ramsses II (pharaoh) |
LE 1 | brown/red | Qaitbay mosque | Statues at Abu Simbel temple |
LE 5 | Turquoise | Ibn Tulun mosque | Hapi (Egyptian god) |
LE 10 | Orange-red | Al-Fattah Al-Aleem mosque | Pyramid and death mask |
LE 20 | Green | Alabaster mosque | War chariot |
LE 50 | blue-rust | Abu Hurayba mosque | Temple of Edfu |
LE 100 | turquoise-brown | Sultan Hassan mosque | Great Sphinx of Giza |
LE 200 | olive-pine green-red | Qani-Bay mosque | Seated Scribe sculpture |
The Gibraltar pound is used only in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar and is designated by the abbreviation GIP. Prior to the introduction of the Gibraltar pound, the territory used the Spanish Real up to 1927. Gibraltar pound banknotes share many elements with pound sterling banknotes, though their color/denomination pairs and rear panel portraits differ significantly.
Denomination | Color | Front portrait | Flipside portrait |
---|---|---|---|
£5 | Green | Queen Elizabeth II | Moorish castle |
£10 | Blue | Queen Elizabeth II | John Trumbull’s “The Sortie Made by the Garrison of Gibraltar” |
£20 | Orange | Queen Elizabeth II | HMS Victory after Battle of Trafalgar |
£50 | Red | Queen Elizabeth II | Buildings in Grand Casemates Square |
£100 | Purple | Queen Elizabeth II | King's Bastion fortifications |
The Lebanese pound was first issued in 1925 and is designated by the abbreviations LBP or LL (the latter being a reflection of the currency's alternate name, the lira). Lebanon used the Turkish pound before World War I, then switched briefly to the Egyptian pound in 1918, before France helped launch new currency for both Lebanon and Syria (the Syrian pound). The Lebanese pound was officially decoupled from Syria's pound in 1939. Lebanese pound coins are issued in values from LBP 25 to LBP 500, and banknotes have values ranging from LBP 1,000 to LBP 100,000.
Both Sudan and South Sudan, which separated from one another in 2011, use a form of pounds as their main currency. The first Sudanese pound (abbrev. SDP) was issued in 1956, before the two countries split, and replaced the Egyptian pound. This pound was itself replaced by the dinar in 1992. However, a new Sudanese pound (SDG) was introduced in 2007, then reworked in 2011 upon the secession of South Sudan. Additional bills in higher denominations were released in 2019.
Denomination | Color | Front image | Reverse image | Date issued |
---|---|---|---|---|
LS 2 | Olive-tan, red, brown | Pottery | Musical instruments | June 2011 |
LS 5 | Gray, red, green | Architecture & satellite | Dam, windmill, electricity tower | June 2011 |
LS 10 | Green, blue | Tree & camel | Presidential Palace in Khartoum | June 2011 |
LS 20 | Brown, red, gray | Wooden gears & oil derrick | Factory, fruit, satellite dish | June 2011 |
LS 50 | Brown, green, red, gray | Elephants, rhino, giraffe | Camels, goat, ram, bull | June 2011 |
LS 50 | Red, blue, purple | Gold bars & building | Camels, boat, fisherman | Apr. 2018 |
LS 100 | Tan, red, gray | Pyramids | Hydroelectric dam | Jan. 2019 |
LS 200 | Olive, blue, tan | Waterfall, lake, birds | Fish and coral | Feb. 2019 |
LS 200 | Red, tan, blue-gray | Woman, hut, buildings | People with hands clasped | Aug. 2019 |
LS 500 | Purple, pink, gray | Satellite dishes & tower | Refinery | Mar. 2019 |
LS 1000 | Blue, green, turquoise | Grain elevator and silos | Waterfall, lake, farmers plowing | June 2019 |
Upon seceding from Sudan in 2011, South Sudan established its own version of the pound. Every South Sudanese pound (SSP) banknote features a portrait of Dr. John Garang de Mabior, who led the country's independence movement, on the front side; and a wildlife image on the other side. South Sudan issues pound notes across a very wide range of denominations, from SSP 0.05 to SSP 1,000.
Denomination | Color | Reverse image |
---|---|---|
SSP 0.05 | Olive/gray/tan | Ostrich |
SSP 0.10 | Green/yellow | Kudu |
SSP 0.25 | Red/pink | River |
SSP 1 | Green/gray/aqua | Giraffes |
SSP 5 | Red/gray/orange | Aliab Dinka cattle |
SSP 10 | Pine green/gray/olive | Cape buffalo, pineapple |
SSP 20 | Red/orange/gray | Oryx |
SSP 50 | Purple/pink/gray/orange | Elephants |
SSP 100 | Blue/gray/green/orange | Lion |
SSP 500 | Olive/gray/orange | River |
SSP 1000 | Maroon/gray/orange | Ostrich |
Syria first replaced the Ottoman lira with the Egyptian pound as its currency in 1919, under the guidance of France, which occupied Syria after World War I. This was replaced in 1924 by the Syro-Lebanese pound, which was used by both Syria and Lebanon. The split into two separate currencies came in 1937. The Syrian pound (SYP) has lost considerable value since the Syrian Civil War began in 2011. In March 2011, the SYP exchange rate with the US dollar was 47:1 (meaning 1 USD was the equivalent of 47 SYP). In November 2022, the ratio was 2513:1, and had been notably lower earlier in the year.
Country | Classification | Currency | $1 USD (Feb 2024) = |
---|---|---|---|
Egypt | Country | Egyptian pound (EGP) | 30.9 |
United Kingdom | Country | Pound sterling (GBP) | 0.78 |
Sudan | Country | Sudanese pound (SDG) | 601 |
Syria | Country | Syrian pound (SYP) | 2512 |
South Sudan | Country | South Sudanese pound (SSP) | 130 |
Lebanon | Country | Lebanese pound (LBP) | 89342 |
Gibraltar | British Overseas Territory | Gibraltar pound (GIP)* | 0.78 |
Falkland Islands | British Overseas Territory | Falkland Islands pound (FKP)* | 0.788 |
Jersey | British Crown Dependency | Pound sterling (GBP),Jersey pound (JEP)* | 0.787 |
Isle of Man | British Crown Dependency | Pound sterling (GBP),Manx pound (IMP)* | 0.78 |
Guernsey | British Crown Dependency | Pound sterling (GBP), Guernsey pound (GGP)* | 0.787 |