I had 15 million old lirasi and sent it to a firm in the UK hoping for big bucks. Hey it was 15 million! I got back a whole £4.90 after fees.
Unfortunately the Lirasi was devalued by a ratio of 1 million to 1 new Turkish Lire when the currency changed. So £15 million became 15 lire which is about £6.25 at the best exchange rate so I guess £4.90 was not bad for an old currency.
cash4coins.co.uk exchange coins and notes even old stuff like mine.
How much is 1000000 1970 turk lirasi u.s dollars worth the 1970 bill is the old currency and no longer legal tender. It is worth around 66 cents
Old Turkish Lira are a defunct currency and only valuable as collector's objects. You cannot exchange them anywhere in the world.
Any age
Little under 30 Euros in direct exchange.
250, 000 lirasi (old) is now only .25 of a New Turkish Lira so worth nothing in any currency
Need to go to a bank that deals with foreign currency. However, it is likely that the money you are holding is Old Turkish Lira (since there are no bills for 100,000 New Turkish Lira). If this is the case, your currency is defunct and worthy only as a keepsake.
You can still exchange or donate (UNicef, Peta) all old European currencies (e.g. deutsche marks, austrian schilling, etc.) through the related link.
Besyuz Bin Türk Lirası is an old money now, it is 0.5 now, so as normal conditions 0.5 is nearly 25 cents. However since it is an old money, you can sell it maximum as 5 dollars I assume, how longer you keep it, it will get worthy.
Turk Broda was born on May 15, 1914 and died on October 17, 1972. Turk Broda would have been 58 years old at the time of death or 101 years old today.
IF you are fortunate enough to be in one of the countries that used to use the particular denomination, some large banks may still exchange them for euros (note - not " euro's ") However you may or may not take a beating on the exchange rate because there is no use for these old coins.
hala is 10 years old
Turk Broda died on October 17, 1972 at the age of 58.