No, you must convert the euro into the Romanian leu. But euros are accepted officially by air transport agencies, tourist agencies, banks.
Also many individuals accept euros and generally other currencies: dollars, sterling's, Swiss francs, etc.
See link below.
The official currency in Romania is leu (lei) not euro.
Euro is not official in Romania.
We have leu; 1 Leu = 100 Bani.Euro is not official in Romania (today 1 euro = 4,1 lei).
Because Romania is not a member of the euro zone.
2006, millions euro Canadian imports from Romania: 60
A lot more than two countries in Europe do not use it. Europe consists of over 50 countries. 28 of those countries are members of an organisation called the European Union. 18 of those countries use it, so 10 of those 28 countries do not use the Euro. Those 10 countries are: The United Kingdom, Poland, Romania, Sweden, Denmark, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Lithuania, The Czech Republic and Croatia.
As of 01/31/2011, Romania registered the following (approximate): Import: 3.6 B Euro Export: 3.4 B Euro Trade DEFICIT (Bal.of Trade): 0.2 B Euro (190 million Euro) As of 01/31/2010, Romania registered the following (approximate): Import: 2.8 B Euro Export: 2.3 B Euro Trade DEFICIT (Bal.of Trade): 0.5 B Euro (473 million Euro)
Today, 04.06.2011: 50 bani (Romania) = 0,12 euro.
As of the 1st of January 2014, 18 members of the European Union use the Euro. The 10 that do not are: United Kingdom Bulgaria Croatia Czech Republic Denmark Hungary Lithuania Poland Romania Sweden
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Approx. 150 euro with WizzAir.
Leu (lei) and ban (bani) are the Romanian currencies; euro is used only unofficial or in special cases. Romania plans to institute use of the euro by 2015. However, because of the stability of the euro (and the instability of the lei) most hotels, some restaurants, and many other stores in larger cities set there prices in euro. If however you pay in euro or US$, your "change" will be in lei.