Canadian bills lose their value at end of year

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by Mountain Man, Dec 22, 2020.

  1. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    Jaelus and Inspector43 like this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. lettow

    lettow Senior Member

    I will redeem all the $25.00 notes you have even after January 1, 2021.
     
  4. Jersey magic man

    Jersey magic man Supporter! Supporter

    I wonder if the gov't is also doing this for purposes of ferreting out illicit money such as laundering, black market, and drug organizations.
     
  5. Legomaster1

    Legomaster1 Cointalk Patron

    I heard about this. Just to clarify, they don't lose their value- they lose "legal tender status", which is an entirely different thing. Private banks, as well as the bank of Canada will exchange them indefinitely. (Personally, I've got no interest in swapping my Canadian 1 and 2 dollar bills. They're worth more than face anyways. I wish I had a 1000 though!)

    From Bank of Canada:
    "In short, removing legal tender status means that some older bank notes will no longer have the official status of being approved for payments of debt. Essentially, that means you may no longer be able to spend that 1935 $25 bank note to buy items at a store. But these bank notes will not lose their face value. If you have any of them, you will still be able to take them to your financial institution or send them to the Bank of Canada to redeem their value."

    The thing that actually loses value at the end of this year are Spanish peseta coins and notes, so if you've got any, best to get those to the Banco de España as soon as possible and convert them into Euro.
     
    Last edited: Dec 22, 2020
    NOS likes this.
  6. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    NOPE!
    Most illicit transactions are now in BITCOIN/ other cryto currencies.

    A $1000 bill in 2020 has same real value as a $20 bill in 1960. But back then a $1000 bill was a fair chunk of change.
     
    Legomaster1 likes this.
  7. techwriter

    techwriter Well-Known Member

    Canada, hey? wonder how these would convert to U.S. $
    rdr_canada_2Jan1937_KN-3273723_face.jpg Canada_1954_$1_DevilFace_BC-29b_JA7004534_face.jpg canada_$1_1954_star_-AA0066669_face_50pct.jpg
     
    capthank and panzerman like this.
  8. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    One of my 20s 3837a8f7c10f87acbd95158c0482ca59.jpg 1fe88507aae4f357db1510774d850aaf.jpg
     
    Railguy, capthank and Legomaster1 like this.
  9. Bradley Trotter

    Bradley Trotter Well-Known Member

    My personal favorite of the two-dozen or so Canadian notes that I own.

    1937 Canadian $2 Obverse .png
    1937 Canadian $2 Reverse .png
     
    Last edited: Dec 22, 2020
    capthank, panzerman and Legomaster1 like this.
  10. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    Sorry, wrong thread
     

    Attached Files:

  11. techwriter

    techwriter Well-Known Member

    And these are not going to be "redeemed"
    star_2dol_Canada_1974__astkRW5347455_face.jpg pmg_Canada_2dol_astk0131190_1954_face.jpg
     
  12. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

  13. UncleScroge

    UncleScroge Well-Known Member

    In the old days they actually had $4 notes!
    Canadian $4 Bill Obverse.jpg Canadian $4 Bill Reverse.jpg
     
    Gilbert, NOS, Bradley Trotter and 4 others like this.
  14. techwriter

    techwriter Well-Known Member

    Definitely not on these, too much history.
    canada_18xx_$1_colonialbankofcanada_EPN_face.jpg canada_1837_$1_StLawrenceBank-LumberCo_face.jpg
     
    john65999, NOS, Legomaster1 and 2 others like this.
  15. johnyb

    johnyb Member

    The older the notes the more solidly elegant,regal and wonderful they look.
     
    panzerman likes this.
  16. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Everything old is better:happy: art/cars/coins/ architecture/ commonsense.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page