Are these £50 still legal tender?
Are these £50 still legal tender?
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Discussion

extraT

Original Poster:

1,876 posts

174 months

Tuesday 26th September 2023
quotequote all
A relative gave me a bunch of £50 notes as they have no intention of visiting the UK at all… they are the old paper style notes… are they still legal tender? If not can I swap them at a bank (we will be in the UK for Christmas).


stinkyspanner

939 posts

101 months

Tuesday 26th September 2023
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If you have a UK bank account they'll accept them, otherwise you can queue up at the Bank of England

gotoPzero

20,099 posts

213 months

Tuesday 26th September 2023
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Last year the paper one went out. You can swap at most big banks still as its only 12 months. Or PO.

Super Sonic

12,671 posts

78 months

Tuesday 26th September 2023
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You can swap them at a bank as long as you haven't got a sackful.

gotoPzero

20,099 posts

213 months

Tuesday 26th September 2023
quotequote all
Ah you are not in the UK. Well try this

https://www.postoffice.co.uk/banknote-exchange

Max is £300 I think.

You have to show ID.

extraT

Original Poster:

1,876 posts

174 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
Perfect, I knew PH would have the answer! I’ll take them with me and swap at the bank or give them to a mate to exchange!

Cheers!

ET!

Mr Pointy

12,901 posts

183 months

Wednesday 27th September 2023
quotequote all
In my experience a bank won't just change the notes & give you new ones - they have to be paid into an account. I tried Barclays, Nat West, Nationwide & Lloyds & none of them would do it.

nismocat

936 posts

32 months

Thursday 28th September 2023
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If the serial numbers are sequential I would be worried.

Is your "relative" a bank blagger?

RJO

840 posts

295 months

Thursday 28th September 2023
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A couple of thoughts if you have difficulty...

Go to a Casino and exchange it for chips, then cash the chips in.

Find an agent for you credit card, and deposit it into that account.


mikey_b

2,529 posts

69 months

Thursday 28th September 2023
quotequote all
Mr Pointy said:
In my experience a bank won't just change the notes & give you new ones - they have to be paid into an account. I tried Barclays, Nat West, Nationwide & Lloyds & none of them would do it.
That's not my experience though, so it must vary. I walked into Lloyds a couple of months ago with some paper tenners and walked back out with the same value in newer plastic ones. TBF I am an account holder there, but other than waving a Lloyds debit card in the general direction of the cashier, they didn't seem to care too much.

Maybe if it's hundreds of pounds or more, it'd be different. I think it was only about £30 or £40 in my case.

Mr Pointy

12,901 posts

183 months

Thursday 28th September 2023
quotequote all
mikey_b said:
Mr Pointy said:
In my experience a bank won't just change the notes & give you new ones - they have to be paid into an account. I tried Barclays, Nat West, Nationwide & Lloyds & none of them would do it.
That's not my experience though, so it must vary. I walked into Lloyds a couple of months ago with some paper tenners and walked back out with the same value in newer plastic ones. TBF I am an account holder there, but other than waving a Lloyds debit card in the general direction of the cashier, they didn't seem to care too much.

Maybe if it's hundreds of pounds or more, it'd be different. I think it was only about £30 or £40 in my case.
I didn't get as far as discussing the amount - they just said they would have to be paid in, even at my own bank.