Want this question answered?
The Clydesdale Bank, along with the Royal Bank of Scotland and the Bank of Scotland, still print banknotes for Scotland. As of late 2009, the Clydesdale Bank current issue of banknotes includes the Five, Ten, Twenty, Fifty and One Hundred Pound notes.
The Bank of England don't currently have £100 notes, but the Bank of Scotland do and they are red. The English £50 notes are red as well.
You'll be able to do that in Scotland but not anywhere else.
will the NatWest bank change my saved old 20 pound notes if I am one of their customers
The woman who appears on the Scottish Clydesdale ten pound note is Mary Slessor.She was a Scottish missionary to Nigeria who promoted Christianity and women's rights.
You would have to pay them in to a bank (if you still can).
None. Pound notes are no longer used. We use pound coins now.
If you had 15,000 Pounds worth of Ten Pound notes, there would be 1,500 Ten Pound notes. 15,000 divided by 10 = 1,500.
GBP (Pound) notes ceased to be legal tender in 1988 and were replaced by the pound coin. However some Scottish banks still issue pound notes and are still legal tender.
Absolutely, it is guaranteed in Sterling which happens to be the currency of GB...so tell the English where to go, and if they don't accept it make sure your basket is full when you walk away from it.
no
A pound !