no
Bulgarian lev [BGN] It is fixed to the Euro 1 EUR = 1,95583 BGN
As of November 2014, it has not met all the requirements needed to join it. It will join at some point in the future.
No, they use something called a lev.Bulgaria is in the European Union, but it is at this time (August 10th 2009) not using the euro. Only 16 countries are currently using it.
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
326 million people (excluding Kosovo and Montenegro which combined account for 3 million people). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EurozoneThe Eurozone will be expanded to, Bonaire, Saba and Sint Eustatius (2010), Romania (2014), Estonia (2011), Bulgaria (2014, currency already pegged to the Euro), Poland (2012), Hungary (2010-2014), Czech Republic (2012/2013), Lithuania (2013), Estonia (2011-2013) and Latvia (unknown).Sweden is also obliged to adopt the Euro, but is exploiting a loophole to prolong its adoption infinitely.Great Britain and Denmark have an opt out and do not use the Euro, but in Denmark public opinion is increasingly in favour of adopting the Euro.
Bulgaria does not use the euro. It uses the Lev Only 17 of the 27 countries that are members of the organisation called the European Union use the Euro. The other 10 countries, Bulgaria being one of them, use their own currencies.
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.
The Euro is not the currency of Europe. There are about 50 countries in Europe, of which 28 are members of an organisation known as the European Union. As of the 1st of January 2014, 18 of those 28 countries use the Euro. So most European countries use their own currencies, not the Euro. The first 12 countries to use the Euro started to do so on the 1st of January 2002. The other 6 have joined since then and others will start to use it in the coming years.
Hungary does not use the Euro but you can Exchange the Euro at a bank.
Norway does not use the Euro
As of the 1st of January 2011, 17 of the 27 members of the European Union use the Euro as their currency. Those 17 countries are sometimes called the Euro Zone. See the related questions.
Obviously countries which aren't in Europe don't use the Euro. Additionally, these European Union countries don't use the Euro: The United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Czech Republic, Slovakia (starts using it in 2009), Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. Ireland, France, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxemburg, Germany, Austria, Slovenia, Finland, Greece, Cyprus and Malta are the EU countries which use the Euro. The only non-EU countries which use the Euro are Vatican City, San Marino, Monaco, Andorra (unofficially), Montenegro (unofficially) and the Serbian province of Kosovo (unofficially)