Italian Lire are obsolete and can no longer be converted to U.S. Dollars.
i believe it is worth 1000000000 u.s dollars
in Singapore
100 dollars
Google will answer this question for you if you define "lire" well enough (using the proper ISO currency code): "200 in USD". If it's Italian Lira (ITL), then that currency is obsolete, but it's worth roughly 11 cents. If it's Turkish Lira (TRY), then about 56 dollars ... unless you have an old (pre-2005) coin, in which case it's worth effectively nothing, except possibly to a collector (much, much less than a penny; the currency was re-valuated in 2005 at the rate of a million 2004 Lira per 1 2005 Lira).Other currencies have used the name lire/lira or close variants of that, but without knowing which specific country you mean it's impossible to answer the question.
I guess we will have a problem on that. Lira is an obsolite currency. Italy now use euro instead.
Lire were made obsolete in 2002 when Italy adopted the euro. At that time 200 lire would have been worth less than 15 cents.
i believe it is worth 1000000000 u.s dollars
5.0 million dollars
No. Lire are not worth anything it is no longer used or made. Italy uses the Euro.
WHAT IS A lire 12.000 SERIE P NOTE WORTH?
The actual value of a 200 Lire Italian coin is technically nothing, since Italy now uses the Euro. In the 1970's when it was made, this was worth about forty US cents.
KRYPTONITE
Nothing since the lire doesn't exist any longer. If you can exchange it for Euros it could fetch a few cents, but I don't think much. I was in Italy in that time and the lire was really low in value. I got a good exchange rate for my dollar to lire in that time.
100-lire stainless steel coins from 1955 to 1989 can be worth anywhere from 25 cents to close to $200. It depends on the condition of the coin itself, and the going market for the item.
I just got one it's worth like 20 us cents and is not gold
in Singapore
apparently, 1000 Lire is about 69 cents (or $.69)