Information about what currencies were issued by New Zealand, with lists of coinage, as well as periods when foreign-issued currencies were used. |
Currency | New Zealand Dollar |
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Period | New Zealand Dollar |
Used | 1967 - present |
Description | Prior to the introduction of the New Zealand dollar in 1967, the New Zealand pound was the currency of New Zealand, which had been distinct from the pound sterling since 1933. The pound used the £sd system, in which the pound was divided into 20 shillings and one shilling was divided into 12 pence, which by the 1950s was considered complicated and cumbersome. Switching to decimal currency had been proposed in New Zealand since the 1930s, although only in the 1950s did any plans come to fruition. In 1957, a committee was set up by the Government to investigate decimal currency. The idea fell on fertile ground, and in 1963, the Government decided to decimalise New Zealand currency. The Decimal Currency Act was passed in 1964, setting the date of transition to 10 July 1967. Words such as "kiwi" and "zeal" were proposed to avoid confusion with the word "dollar", which many people at the time associated with the United States dollar. In the end, the word "dollar" was chosen anyway, and an anthropomorphic dollar note cartoon character called "Mr. Dollar" became the symbol of transition in a huge publicity campaign. The Decimal Currency Act prescribed the designs, diameters, and standard weights of the decimal coins. The reverses of the new decimal coins were all designed by Reginald George James Berry (known as James) of Wellington. The obverse design was by Arnold Machin (later superseded by other effigies of Her majesty). On Monday 10 July 1967 ("Decimal Currency Day"), the New Zealand dollar was introduced to replace the pound at a rate of two dollars to one pound (one dollar to ten shillings, ten cents to one shilling, 5⁄6 cent to a penny). Some 27 million new banknotes were printed and 165 million new coins were minted for the changeover. |
Product Name | Mintage |
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Penny Token Brinsmead Pianos | unknown |
One Cent Trial 1966 | unknown |
Two Cents Trial 1966 | unknown |
Five Cents Trial 1966 | unknown |
Ten Cents Trial 1966 | unknown |
Twenty Cents Trial 1966 | unknown |
Fifty Cents Trial 1966 | unknown |
Silver Ounce 1984 Olympic Games | unknown |
Five Dollars 1992 Decimal Currency | 34,000 |
Silver Ounce 1993 Endangered World Wildlife - Hooker Sea Lions | unknown |
Five Dollars 1994 Winter Olympics | 33,300 |
Silver Ounce 2003 Lord of the Rings - The Great River | unknown |
Gold Quarter Ounce 2008 Sir Edmund Hillary | unknown |
Five Dollars 2011 Yellow-Eyed Penguin | unknown |
Silver Ounce 2012 The Hobbit | unknown |
Silver Ounce 2014 The Hobbit - Middle Earth | unknown |
Gold Half Gram 2016 Hector's Dolphin | 4,000 |
Silver Ounce 2018 Manuka Honey | unknown |
Gold Gram Happy Diwali | unknown |
Silver Ounce 2025 Hammerhead Shark | 1,000 |
Currency | New Zealand Pound |
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Period | New Zealand Pound |
Used | 1840 - 1967 |
Description | The pound (symbol £, or NZ£ for distinction) was the currency of New Zealand from 1840 until 1967, when it was replaced by the New Zealand dollar. Like the British pound, it was subdivided into 20 shillings (symbol s) each of 12 pence (symbol d). As a result of the great depression of the early 1930s, the New Zealand agricultural export market to the UK was badly affected. The Australian banks, which controlled the New Zealand exchanges with London, decided to devalue the New Zealand pound in relation to sterling in the UK. By 1933, the New Zealand pound had fallen to a value of only 16 shillings sterling. In 1948 however, it was once again restored to its original sterling value. In 1967, New Zealand decimalised its currency, replacing the pound with the dollar at a rate of $2 = £1 (or $1 = 10s). |
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