Americans First Time Seeing British Pounds

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  • Опубліковано 7 вер 2024
  • In this video, my wife and I as some random American couple check out British Pounds for the first time! We also compare it to the USD, watch the video to see which one we like better, and tell us in the comments which you think is better.
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    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS
    #Currency #Pounds #UKversusUS

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,5 тис.

  • @michw3755
    @michw3755 2 роки тому +406

    The coin you held up against the two dollar bill was actually a 2p coin, your equivalent of 2 cents, a £2 coin is quite large and bi-coloured both gold and silver and, if someone says that's £1.99 and you give then a 2p coin they'll think you're having a laugh 😂👍

    • @arthurvasey
      @arthurvasey 2 роки тому +6

      Except that £1 $1 - but, putting exchange rates to one side, it’s the approximate equivalent!
      Just as well we are now using decimal currency - under the pre-decimal system, every twelve pence was a shilling - the lowercase letter d stood for pence (lira, soldi and denarii) - the new p took some getting used to, though base 10 works better than base 12 - 240d was £1 - now it’s 100p - you also had half a crown - two of which made up a dollar - don’t ask precisely what I mean - there used to be a ten shilling note - a shilling was called a bob - nowadays, the lowest value note is a fiver!
      Old silver sixpences (tanners) were legal tender almost into the 80s - but they weren’t 6p - 6d was not 6d - they were two-and-a-half pence in one coin - two sixpences = 5p! 6 + 6 = 5?
      JMW Turner was a painter - I think he painted landscapes!
      As to the coins - pre-decimal ones looked like pirate treasure or doubloons or something like that- even the early decimal coins were about double the size they are now - oddly enough, size-wise, the 2p coin was bigger than the 5p one - over the years, the coins have been re-minted, so they are smaller - an absolute nightmare for the manufacturers of slot machines, video game machines in amusement arcades, pinball machines, pool tables, snooker tables (for the overhead lights), jukeboxes, vending machines - all of which had to be tinkered with to take the new coins - either that or have some old ones handy behind the bar - some manufacturers of vending machines invented special tokens that you bought from somewhere in the venue and you put the tokens in the machine and pressed the button that corresponded with the snack or drink of choice!

    • @MoanaOnCrack
      @MoanaOnCrack 2 роки тому +8

      @@bigfrankfraser1391 No they said that the equivalent of 2p is 2¢

    • @Ingens_Scherz
      @Ingens_Scherz 2 роки тому

      I loved that!

    • @pjtufty66
      @pjtufty66 2 роки тому +6

      Dont listen to these lies
      Ill exchange your 2 dollar coins for your dollar bills
      😂

    • @robertscheinost179
      @robertscheinost179 2 роки тому

      @@arthurvasey It was much easier to make change with the 12-240d because of the many combinations of coins that could be used. It really doesn't matter though considering that metal money is pretty much worthless compared to paper, or in this case plastic. The US bill currency is actually cloth, a linen and cotton blend.

  • @89Joe08
    @89Joe08 2 роки тому +336

    The different sizes help blind people. The coins also have different tactile feels to them and have a memorable pattern (1p is small and smooth, 2p is large and smooth, 5p is small with ridges, 10p is large with ridges, 20p is small and non-circular, 50p is large and non-circular, £1 is small and thick, £2 is large and thick).
    American money being the same size and colour and tactile feel must be really awful for the visually impaired. It's one of the things I like about UK/EU money.

    •  2 роки тому +14

      The different sizes help everyone. As do the sizes/styles of coins. How I know? Because those differences (not the actual styles, they changed) in size are old, decades old, from before the time we mandated (and it's good we did, don't get me wrong) everything be accessible.

    • @_M_O_E_
      @_M_O_E_ 2 роки тому +20

      @ you ever see the movie my cousin vinny? the bit where he says "how do i know you dont just have a roll of 1's wrapped in a 100?". probably a pretty common scam in the US, couldnt do that with english money

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 2 роки тому +2

      @ They've also got smaller each time redesigned, I can just remember the old white fiver, although out of circulation by then, it was about A5 in size maybe slightly larger. When the blue fiver came in along with a ten pound note they were the largest denomination notes in circulation at the time. We then had four bank notes, 10 shilling (50p), one pound, five and ten pound. Scotland, N.I., Jersey, Guernsey and the I.O.M. held onto their pound note well after the pound coin came in.

    • @haydensgamingadventures
      @haydensgamingadventures 2 роки тому +10

      I'm from the UK but now live in mainland Europe.. you can definitely see why coins are so different, I hate euros when its comes to coins, all round and basically the same colour.. but its 2022 so I use cards anyway

    • @alpine_newt
      @alpine_newt 2 роки тому +12

      I'm not blind, but I took for granted being able to count my change, in my pocket, without taking it out. Then I went to Canada and found it hard to tell the coins apart by sight!

  • @missyprime8198
    @missyprime8198 2 роки тому +170

    You were correct about the reason for money sizes being different. Visually impaired people can tell by touch what note or coin they're handling.
    Over the years a few of our coins got redesigned because their size/shape was too close to other coins.
    I'm not visually impaired but can identify each note & coin with my eyes shut, it's a very good system

    • @evelynmacmillan2485
      @evelynmacmillan2485 2 роки тому +8

      Canada also has polymer bank notes that are similar to UK notes but are of equal size. We differentiate for sight impairment
      with braille at the upper left corner.

    • @missyprime8198
      @missyprime8198 2 роки тому +2

      @@evelynmacmillan2485 That got me curious so I checked some notes. For a second I thought I'd found some brail on our notes but the few bumps are exactly the same on different denominations.
      It appears that size is the only aid for visually impaired people here.

    • @cowardsallaround98
      @cowardsallaround98 2 роки тому

      Why the strange smell from USA Bank notes

    • @craigslater6508
      @craigslater6508 2 роки тому +11

      @@missyprime8198 If you look at the bumps on the various notes, You will find that the £5 note has no bumps, £10 note has 2 lots of 4 bumps and the £20 note has 3 lots of bumps. This is to help blind and partially sighted people. I am blind myself and because of these bumps I find money a lot easier to handle than it used to be.

    • @chrisparsons8616
      @chrisparsons8616 2 роки тому +2

      The different sizes are also an anti counterfeiting measure. It means you can't "wash" the bills, which you can do with dollars.

  • @misterflibble9799
    @misterflibble9799 2 роки тому +222

    "pence" is plural of "penny". Your equivalent would be "cents" or "cent". The (approximate) equivalent of the $1 bill would be the £1 coin. We used to have £1 notes, but they were replaced by the first (circular) £1 coin in the 1980s, and that was then replaced by the new (12-sided) £1 coin a few years ago.
    Have to disagree with Angela - the fact that all the bills are the same size (and colour) is something that I particularly dislike about American money. I keep notes (bills) in my wallet in denomination order, with the highest-value ones at the back, so with the higher-denomination ones being taller, it's easy to see where the transitions are.
    No, there are not chips in the money. There are metallic sections as an anti-counterfeiting device.
    "I promise to pay the bearer on demand..." is the basis of fiat currency. Basically, the note itself is fundamentally worthless, it's just an IOU. The Bank of England technically promises to pay the note's face value to whoever presents it at the bank.
    JMW Turner was a famous English painter, known particularly for atmospheric landscapes. His name was given to the annual "Turner Prize" for art.
    Yes, 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1 and £2 coins are in common circulation, although £2 coins are less common. The £5 coin exists, but is not in common circulation.
    Another thing to note is that the 2p coin (which you missed) is sized such that it is twice the weight of a 1p coin, and similarly for 5p and 10p coins. Therefore, you can weigh a mixture of 1p and 2p coins (or 5p and 10p coins) to ascertain their value without having to sort them.

    • @douglasbrown5692
      @douglasbrown5692 2 роки тому +7

      We also used to have ten shilling (50p) notes. Little scruffy brown jobs.

    • @markj66
      @markj66 2 роки тому +14

      I think they had a 2p coin but thought it was £2.

    • @sarahelliott3095
      @sarahelliott3095 2 роки тому +5

      @@markj66 They did as they said in the video " I think the 2p is what would be £2 which would b e equivalent to our 2 dollar bill"

    • @misterflibble9799
      @misterflibble9799 2 роки тому +3

      @@sarahelliott3095 Ah, I missed that, as I must have been writing other parts of the comment at a time :)

    • @TyRex93
      @TyRex93 2 роки тому +12

      also the thing with the size helps visually impaired people alot, yes there is braill but also size matters ;)

  • @mandieg2321
    @mandieg2321 2 роки тому +469

    Hi guys, great video as per usual. The 2 pence bronze coin is equivalent to 2 pennies not 2 dollars. We also have a one pound coin and a two pound coin, that you don’t appear to have, but will see lots of. We tend to use the smaller denominations ( I can’t remember the last time I saw a fifty pound note), so don’t be shocked if that’s the only fifty you see.

    • @ivylasangrienta6093
      @ivylasangrienta6093 2 роки тому +86

      Yes, don't confuse pence with pound.

    • @Piddemannen
      @Piddemannen 2 роки тому +22

      @@ivylasangrienta6093 That would garner some funny responses

    • @adamp7266
      @adamp7266 2 роки тому +55

      Imagine them going into a shop with 1p trying to buy something for a quid

    • @jillosler9353
      @jillosler9353 2 роки тому +54

      Lots of shops won't accept £50 notes; they are popular with counterfeiters and the notes are considered 'drugs related'!

    • @Davegeen42
      @Davegeen42 2 роки тому +12

      Don't forget the £5 coin

  • @longschlongsilver7628
    @longschlongsilver7628 2 роки тому +15

    So in Britain, we have from smallest to biggest, 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, and then we have the £1 coin and the £2 coin (not to be confused with the 1p coin and 2p coin lol). The £1 coin was recently changed to be 12 sided, rather than a perfect circle, to make it harder to counterfeit. And yes, the 50p coin is very common over here, while the £50 note, you'll rarely see.

  • @Hex...
    @Hex... 2 роки тому +69

    Mixing up pennys and pounds is so funny. Imagine you’re a cashier and you’re handed 2p (£0.02) for something that costs £2.

  • @ajkgordon
    @ajkgordon 2 роки тому +51

    Pence is simply the plural of penny and equivalent to your cents and penny. So two pence (2p) is just two pennies, not equivalent to two dollars.
    There are also one and two pound (£1 and £2) coins, which are equivalent to your one and two dollar bills.
    And bill (US) = note (UK). So we say a five pound note.
    Hope that helps.

  • @ccityplanner1217
    @ccityplanner1217 2 роки тому +60

    Yes, the 50p is in common circulation. For some reason it is one of the coins I most commonly use personally.

    • @another_day4783
      @another_day4783 2 роки тому +1

      When i was worked in retail we had lots of 50p some time i had to give people £3- £4 pounds in 50p.

    • @heidihorler6963
      @heidihorler6963 2 роки тому +1

      I know I see 50p coins all the time very common

    • @BeeSmith
      @BeeSmith 2 роки тому

      Useful to put in machines to put air in your tyres.

    • @Mat0305
      @Mat0305 2 роки тому +3

      Yeah all of the UK coins are widely in circulation. Although the £50 notes are quite rare to be handed one unless you're drawing a substantial amount of money from inside a bank as they're not dispensed from ATM . Many small shops won't accept £50 notes, not sure why, maybe loads of forgeries at one point ?.

    • @toddlerj102
      @toddlerj102 Рік тому +1

      @@Mat0305 £50 notes are a huge loss if you accept a fake one.

  • @coot1925
    @coot1925 2 роки тому +67

    When I used to visit the USA twice a year I was shocked at how easy it was to get the notes mixed up due to them all being the same size & colour. You really have to look at them carefully to make sure you don't give someone a $20 bill instead of a lower denomination. I have no idea how blind people cope with it. It is a shame that you didn't have all the coins because you would notice how different they were from each othet in size, shape and weight. Again, this is for the benefit of the blind. When you visit us here in the UK you will also realize that you don't have to add tax onto the price of items in the shops because it's already done. What you see on the price tag is what you pay. Great reaction, albeit a bit frantic.

  • @stijnvanhoecke4753
    @stijnvanhoecke4753 2 роки тому +83

    Euro bills are also different sizes and colours and quite honestly, it's one of the best things about them. We don't usually hold our bills in our hands, they are in our wallets until we use them to pay... and if you open up a wallet, we can easily spot every bank note in there simply because they "stack" in size. If you place a €50, €20, €10 and €5 in order (large to small), you can see in an instant without flicking through the bills that you have €85. If you do the same with $85 you have to look at each individual bill to know how much you have in total simply because you can't tell from a distance. Open up an EU/UK wallet and you immediatly see which bills you have in there. If you really want to hold money in your hands, fold the stack in half (like we usually do without even thinking about it), or use your thumb to pinch the stack of bills from the front and back instead of sideways :)

    •  2 роки тому +2

      Size and color… as many indicators as possible, that's a rule of UIs (and this is a user interface).

    • @marshalldonaghy4542
      @marshalldonaghy4542 2 роки тому +12

      The reason they're different sizes, is really to aid the blind.

    • @rastarn
      @rastarn 2 роки тому +4

      @@marshalldonaghy4542 Yep. It is the entire point behind having different sized bills.

    • @anna-ranja4573
      @anna-ranja4573 2 роки тому +5

      And they are a good design for blind people in size and because of the braille types

    • @martinlewis1015
      @martinlewis1015 2 роки тому +3

      When you do visit England don't take London as all of England ( they are not all locals) I would checkout other parts of UK

  • @offline-404
    @offline-404 2 роки тому +13

    Cool fact: combining one of each UK coin (1p,2p,5p,10p,20pand50p) creates a coat of arms.

  • @andrewmoss3681
    @andrewmoss3681 2 роки тому +38

    Afternoon all.
    The big reason why British notes are all different sizes is to help blind individuals more easily differentiate between note. Same reason that certain parts of the notes are raised (lightly run your thumb over the part that reads "Bank of England".
    Quick tip for when you get over here. Remember the difference between the penny & the pound (cents & dollars). Coins tend to be pennys (cents), (£1 & £2 being the main 2 exceptions), Notes are pounds
    Edit: visually impaired, rather than blind. My apologies for my slip up there

    • @glastonbury4304
      @glastonbury4304 2 роки тому +1

      blind people 😂....they have braille on them

    • @christiananderson8686
      @christiananderson8686 2 роки тому +3

      The size difference is not for blind people, the Braille is. The raised letterings aren't for blind people either, they are anti-counterfeit measures. As stated by the Royal Mint, the main reason for continued size difference between denominations is for continuity and note detecting inside machines.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 роки тому +4

      @@christiananderson8686 Before the introduction of the plastic notes with braille the size differences between the paper notes was how blind people could tell the different notes.

    • @christiananderson8686
      @christiananderson8686 2 роки тому +2

      @@Thurgosh_OG I know, but it's not the reason they're different sizes any more. The Braille solved that problem. Like I said, the reason now with our new notes is for continuity and technology. We were talking about why the notes ARE different sizes, not why they WERE different sizes.

    • @andrewmoss3681
      @andrewmoss3681 2 роки тому

      @@glastonbury4304 oops, thought I'd put that above. Please feel free to mock & ridicule the dunce (me) ☺️😁

  • @nixpuk75
    @nixpuk75 2 роки тому +55

    So sweet thinking that 2p is the equivalent of £2 🥰

  • @Simian-bz7zo
    @Simian-bz7zo 2 роки тому +83

    The guy on the back of the £20 note, Joseph Mallard William Turner (Usually abbreviated to JMW Turner) was a 19th century painter, who is widely considered to be one of the greatest artists Britain has ever produced. The ship visible behind him on the note is the HMS Temeraire, which was the subject of a painting by Turner called The Fighting Temeraire - voted as Britain's favourite painting in a BBC poll a few years ago (it's also the painting that James Bond discusses with Q when they meet for the first time in Skyfall).

    • @radicaladz
      @radicaladz 2 роки тому +3

      There's a movie about him too called Mr Turner, starring Timothy Spall. It is, even amongst Brits, a film where subtitles are a must.

    • @scmtuk3662
      @scmtuk3662 2 роки тому +1

      And of course, the Turner Prize was named after him

    • @Moggy471
      @Moggy471 2 роки тому

      My favourite painting

    • @alandillon968
      @alandillon968 2 роки тому

      Turner is considered by some to be the first English Impressionist style painter and its suggested he influenced the French Impressionists as they were aware of him and would have seen his work when they visited in London. Don't know how true it is.
      The reason why few Americans are aware of Turner or his Paintings is there are very few paintings in America of Turners and they are in museums. This is because on his death Turner bequeathed all his paintings to the country, so few were sold abroad before his death.

    • @stevetaylor8698
      @stevetaylor8698 2 роки тому

      If you want to be really technical and nerdy, the ship depicted wasn't HMS any more as she had been de-commisioned and sold for scrap. She is being towed to her to her destruction - in reality she would not have had masts in place by this time.

  • @patriciaburke6639
    @patriciaburke6639 2 роки тому +64

    I am aware of the £50 note, but have never ever had one issued to me. If I was withdrawing a significant sum from the Bank I could ask for it to be in £50 notes, but generally speaking you don’t see them in general usage, at least where I live. The £20 note is the ‘go to’ high value Note in most people’s wallet.

    • @crose7412
      @crose7412 2 роки тому +2

      Yep, I haven't seen a £50 note in decades and I think then it was only once.

    • @Zooumberg
      @Zooumberg 2 роки тому +3

      Do you live further north, Patricia? We rarely see them in Newcastle.

    • @Blackbeard007
      @Blackbeard007 2 роки тому +3

      I use £50 notes for some large second hand cash purchases.
      If you take over £1000 cash from the bank, they offer £50s.

    • @Hiforest
      @Hiforest 2 роки тому +3

      Scotland have £100 notes too.

    • @demonic_myst4503
      @demonic_myst4503 2 роки тому

      In genral ones u get that much you either use card or apple pay now days

  • @gcljohn
    @gcljohn 2 роки тому +51

    The Bank of England was founded in 1694, the first central bank in the world, not the first to print money. They were the first to print government authorised money in payment of government debt. The size of the notes produced has consistently reduced over the centuries, as has the value! Have a great trip guys.

    • @zpitzer
      @zpitzer 2 роки тому +1

      Nope, The Swedish Central Bank is the first and oldest (1668)

    • @SiGr10614
      @SiGr10614 2 роки тому

      @@zpitzer wrong! it is largely documented the bank of England was the first EVER to print money. i am american and even know this.

    • @SiGr10614
      @SiGr10614 2 роки тому +3

      @@zpitzer In 1695 the Bank of England was the
      first to initiate the permanent issue of
      banknotes. Initially, these banknotes
      were handwritten but by 1745,
      standardized printed notes ranging
      from £20 to £1,000 were being
      printed. In 1862 the United States
      issued their first one-dollar bill in
      order to make up for coin shortage
      and to finance the Civil War.

    • @zpitzer
      @zpitzer 2 роки тому

      @@SiGr10614 I wasn't talking about bank notes.

    • @gcljohn
      @gcljohn 2 роки тому +1

      @@zpitzer Thanks. I bow to your superior knowledge. I reckon though that my underlying point is still valid!

  • @missharry5727
    @missharry5727 2 роки тому +31

    You do need to be aware that the UK has become almost cashless since Covid - most people use debit cards or phone apps even for small sums. Cash is still accepted everywhere so don't worry! It might have been interesting to compare values too: as of just now, the US dollar is worth 77 pence.

    • @adamprater6216
      @adamprater6216 2 роки тому

      It's .80 now lol

    • @frankabagnale6436
      @frankabagnale6436 2 роки тому +6

      Almost cashless? Not really.

    • @missharry5727
      @missharry5727 2 роки тому +2

      @@frankabagnale6436 I almost never use cash except for charity boxes and buying the odd item under about £2. Today used my card going on the bus to a hospital appointment - normally I'd walk but it was raining - for a £2 fare.

    • @WideCuriosity
      @WideCuriosity 2 роки тому

      I almost always use cash save for Internet purchases. I consider it far easier to realise how you are spending as time goes on, and wonder if those wanting to avoid cash realise the mistakes they're making. In any case, cash use is going back up now the Covid insanity has mostly faded.

    • @whitehorses460
      @whitehorses460 2 роки тому

      MY cash was actually denied by Webbs of Wychbold in the UK

  • @CaffeineKing
    @CaffeineKing 2 роки тому +53

    It's great to see people pushing their boundaries and trying something new. I hope you enjoy my country (UK) when you get there!

    • @juliecobbina2024
      @juliecobbina2024 2 роки тому

      Your country lol

    • @thatsthat2612
      @thatsthat2612 2 роки тому +2

      I'm leaving this comment to stop the inevitable Christopher Columbus who's bound to stop by and say "the uk isn't a country"

    • @Awe_poop
      @Awe_poop 2 роки тому +3

      @@thatsthat2612 but the uk isn’t a country tho

    • @Awe_poop
      @Awe_poop 2 роки тому

      Srry I just had to

    • @CaffeineKing
      @CaffeineKing 2 роки тому +4

      Heh, thanks @@thatsthat2612. Much appreciated. To confirm, I live in West Yorkshire, within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. :-)

  • @charlestaylor9424
    @charlestaylor9424 2 роки тому +18

    The milling round the edge of coins is a hangover from coins made out of silver - it stops people shaving the coins.

    • @ihathtelekinesis
      @ihathtelekinesis 2 роки тому +2

      Hence the £1 coins that say “decus et tutamen” on them: Latin for “an ornament and a safeguard”.

  • @G1NZOU
    @G1NZOU 2 роки тому +5

    Originally our paper notes also had the size scale for sight impaired, but the new notes also having the braille like dotes, such a thoughtful feature to add.
    End of next month the last paper £20 and £50 notes go out of circulation so we'll be completely polymer.

  • @Tom-s.
    @Tom-s. 2 роки тому +71

    In the UK we are more of a digital cash system, using debit cards (checking account equivalent), and credit cards.
    We also use contactless payment from mobile phones or smart watches, available on Android or Apple devices.
    I personally very rarely have physical cash.

    • @Mrsmiley291
      @Mrsmiley291 2 роки тому +4

      This. I haven't used cash for a couple of years now. Rarely a problem. In the odd case where I need some most places will do cashback

    • @riccol1972
      @riccol1972 2 роки тому +1

      Work sandwich van and window cleaner all cash less now.....

    • @reactions5783
      @reactions5783 2 роки тому +6

      This is correct, the UK is 'mostly' digital cash / debit card system. However, that is mainly in our day-to-day lives, where we frequent known shops and locations that we already know accept such payment. However, I think that even as a Brit, if I were planning on a round the country holiday, I would also make sure to bring some cash as a backup too, or at least stop on the way to my destination to make a withdrawal from any of the numerous ATMs spread throughout the country. That's the one good thing, there's usually an ATM not far away, if you really need it.

    • @markthompson4567
      @markthompson4567 2 роки тому +6

      i only use money always have always will

    • @peterbrown1012
      @peterbrown1012 2 роки тому +1

      We can use contacless from 1p to £100, after so many contacless transactions you have to put your pin in.

  • @angussoutter7824
    @angussoutter7824 2 роки тому +46

    Your gonna be really confused when you discover Scotland has three different £100.00 notes 😂😂

    • @aidenleeds
      @aidenleeds 2 роки тому +5

      And more so when it reads bank of Scotland on it 🤣🤣

    • @stevenredpath9332
      @stevenredpath9332 2 роки тому +3

      Or even see a single Scottish £100 note. I’ve spotted more rocking horse droppings. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @skellious
      @skellious 2 роки тому

      they need a £1 note too. we still have them in Scotland.

    • @skellious
      @skellious 2 роки тому

      @@stevenredpath9332 I bought a car with them one time.

    • @stevenredpath9332
      @stevenredpath9332 2 роки тому

      @@skellious I’ve got family up near the border so have seen Scottish notes but I didn’t even know that they had a £100 note until I read that comment. I hope it was a reliable motor. To quote madness “not quite a jaguar”?

  • @joannagodfrey5111
    @joannagodfrey5111 2 роки тому +8

    Being British I found American notes hard work, if I didn't put them in order of value I couldn't figure what was which. Our plastic notes are far easier to count at the end of a work day, and last longer,

  • @Lily-Bravo
    @Lily-Bravo 2 роки тому +9

    I love seeing how enthusiastic and excited you are about your coming trip. I really hope it lives up to or exceeds your expectations.

  • @BlameThande
    @BlameThande 2 роки тому +45

    This was worth watching just because it's the first time I've ever seen the new £50 note. The only time you ever see them is with tourists who've been stiffed with them and then no shops will accept them - best to change them at a bank. I even once took out £1000 in cash to change to travel money because you got a better deal if you did it in cash, and even then the bank gave me £20 notes not £50 notes!

    • @gilgameshofuruk4060
      @gilgameshofuruk4060 2 роки тому +4

      I've only ever seen one £50 note. It was the week after they were first issued. I was working in a shop after leaving school and at 6am a man came in to buy a pack of cigarettes. The cigarettes were 34p, he was the first customer of the day, I had a float of £30 , so I had to refuse. He was really annoyed, but hey ho.

    • @nmejias370
      @nmejias370 2 роки тому +6

      I'd say that shops not accepting £50 banknotes is a thing of the past. They certainly carry out extra checks on them before accepting them, but based on my experience, seeing £50 notes is becoming more and more normal with the passing of time.

    • @gilgameshofuruk4060
      @gilgameshofuruk4060 2 роки тому +3

      @@nmejias370 The way things are going £50 notes will be counted as small change.

    • @daviniarobbins9298
      @daviniarobbins9298 2 роки тому

      Shops will probably accept them if you are buying nearly or over £50 worth. The problem happens when some idiot thinks they can buy a Mars bar with a fifty pound note. The till probably doesn't have £50 in change. I don't see why a supermarket wouldn't accept a fifty. As long as you aren't taking the p*ss there should be no problem.

    • @daviniarobbins9298
      @daviniarobbins9298 2 роки тому

      @@gilgameshofuruk4060 That's inflation for you. I see a time when our current coins will be phased out because they are all but worthless. The pound will probably end up like the old Spanish money where 100pt is the smallest coin(they had smaller but no one used them). The smallest coin will be 1 pound, then 2, then 5, then 10, then 20, then 50, then 100 with 500 being the smallest banknote. Yeah, I can see this happening within my lifetime.

  • @Courtneyburns90
    @Courtneyburns90 2 роки тому +41

    Something important that hasn't been mentioned is that Bank of England aren't the only Sterling notes. For example I'm in Northern Ireland and we use BoE notes but also Ulster Bank, Bank of Ireland, First Trust etc. Scotland have their notes too (im unsure about Wales) all are sterling notes but just issued by different banks.

    • @markhutton6824
      @markhutton6824 2 роки тому +5

      Wales uses the same notes as England... all the notes in the UK are legal tender throughout... I loved watching the confusion on a face of an English cashier when handing over Northern Ireland and Scottish notes to pay for something! :D

    • @michaelleiper
      @michaelleiper 2 роки тому +8

      @@markhutton6824 Bank of England notes are only legal tender in England and Wales (and the Channel Islands and Isle of Man). Scottish and Northern Irish notes are legal currency throughout the UK (as are Bank of England notes in Scotland and Northern Ireland), but they are not legal tender. Manx and Channel Island notes are legal tender where they're issued, along with Bank of England notes, but aren't legal currency in the UK.
      The reason - Only English law requires "legal tender" to be accepted on the repayment of a debt. Scots and, I assume, Northern Irish law, allows for any reasonable method of payment to be accepted, so doesn't require any notes to be legal tender.

    • @RolandHesz
      @RolandHesz 2 роки тому +2

      @@markhutton6824 it's a pity they quite frequently refuse Scottish notes.
      When I moved to the UK first I had all my cash in Scottish pounds and couldn't use them anywhere, had to go to the bank to exchange it all to English notes. 😒

    • @redfog42
      @redfog42 2 роки тому

      @@markhutton6824 yeah, the only problem I've had using Scottish notes in England was in Newcastle!

    • @stevenredpath9332
      @stevenredpath9332 2 роки тому +1

      @@markhutton6824 the uk doesn’t have an actual legal tender currency. Shops can take anything in payment or refuse any currency.

  • @telstar32
    @telstar32 2 роки тому +38

    Lovely to see you looking at our currency. Here in the UK the £50 note, isn’t very widely used and a lot of smaller shops etc will not accept them. Try and use any £50 notes that you have in larger shops etc. I hope you have a great time.

    • @ewanduffy
      @ewanduffy 2 роки тому +13

      @Matty I sure HMRC would be interested in getting to know you.

    • @themomentalist
      @themomentalist 2 роки тому +7

      @Matty Clearly there was some reason why you chose to not do the obvious thing of taking them to the bank to change…
      😉

    • @tycarne7850
      @tycarne7850 2 роки тому

      The primary users of £50 notes are drug dealers and money launderers; they don't get a lot of day to day use by normal people.

    • @duckwhistle
      @duckwhistle 2 роки тому +2

      @Matty This ^ ^ ^
      Small shops only tend to reject them if they have to make change. If your total spend is over £50 you wont get rejected unlesss its a kid who's never seen one before, and they dont have a senior staff person to call over to verify it.

    • @radicaladz
      @radicaladz 2 роки тому +3

      I work in a casino, so I see 50s on the regular. Whenever I do, I will often say "good old Al Turing", seeing as he was, like me, both autistic and queer. Him getting that spot on the 50 note was a long time coming.

  • @hrundivbakshi3959
    @hrundivbakshi3959 2 роки тому +13

    I never would have thought that a video about comparing foreign currency could be so chaotic. In a good way, of course. You guys always have great banter and Angela dropping her "facts" as Ethan swiftly debunked them cracked me up! Hope your travel preparations are going well.

  • @misterdude117
    @misterdude117 2 роки тому +2

    Sorry if this has been answered already, but the 20 pence shapes is a Heptagon and the newer coins have a fragment of the coat of arms on it so if you have all of them and place them just right it will complete the coat of arms. I personally thought it was cool lol

  • @TheMaraki2
    @TheMaraki2 2 роки тому +30

    You'll have such fun in Scotland as there are 3 different banks printing their own Scottish-themed banknotes.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 роки тому +3

      The Scottish banks issue notes in denominations of £5, £10, £20, £50 and £100. Only the Royal Bank of Scotland continues to issue a small volume of £1 notes.

    • @peterbrown1012
      @peterbrown1012 2 роки тому +5

      Northern Ireland, Channel islands and the Isle of Man also print their own bank notes.

    • @reverendnumbnuts1857
      @reverendnumbnuts1857 2 роки тому

      @@peterbrown1012 And Gibraltar

    • @peterbrown1012
      @peterbrown1012 2 роки тому +2

      @@reverendnumbnuts1857 trouble is that it looks identical to British currency but is not legal tender in the UK, I got caught out at Asda when the cashier handed me back a Guernsey £2 Coin, emailed the Bank of England and they said buisnessess didn't have accept non UK currency.

    • @frglee
      @frglee 2 роки тому +4

      @@peterbrown1012 Technically the last two are 'crown dependencies', not part of the United Kingdom with their own governments and laws, although their monarch is also the Queen, titled as the Lord of Mann in the Isle of Man and The Duke of Normandy in the Channel Islands.

  • @johnhorton1012
    @johnhorton1012 2 роки тому +22

    Be careful in the uk when spending a 50. They can be quite unusual and high value. Some places may not take them or won’t want to give you change on a small item. I would pay by card as much as possible and just keep a small amount of cash.

    • @cliffsinclair4900
      @cliffsinclair4900 2 роки тому +3

      AGREE but be careful on exchange rates and charges. When in Europe, there can be a significant difference paying for product etc on card, all in the conversion applied to the currency and the card. You need to check wherein the transaction the currency is changed, at what rate and the cost applied for changing it, THEN compare cards. It was best in EU to use a debit card and be charged in local currency. The exchange rates elsewhere can be very expensive.

    • @johnhorton1012
      @johnhorton1012 2 роки тому +1

      @@cliffsinclair4900 yes I agree. That's good advice. We have used a card designed for travel, when we have been in mainland Europe, Canada and the USA. It's worked well - revolut. (I'm not linked to it in any way!)

    • @kathpearson8966
      @kathpearson8966 2 роки тому

      Agree. £50 notes are rarely seen and will often be treated with suspicion so don’t take loads. £20 notes are much more common. Lots of places are still cashless and many places would prefer you to pay by card than pay for something small with a large note, i.e. try not to use a note that is more than twice the cost of the item. Smaller shops will often not like giving that much change. £1, £2 and 50p coins are very commonly used but don’t get pounds and pence mixed up! 1, 2 and 5p coins are annoying bits of change. £1 coins are very useful and common. They are easy to spot and quite chunky so easy to identify. You need £1 coins for supermarket shopping trollies (carts).

    • @ianprince1698
      @ianprince1698 2 роки тому

      @@kathpearson8966 some small shop transactions are now beginning to request cash for small amounts they find it easier

    • @colinscotland2887
      @colinscotland2887 2 роки тому

      @@kathpearson8966 British banknotes, well they are English banknotes but British as well, 3 countries in the UK make bank notes which are Scotland, England and Northern Ireland and are all Polymer Plastic, Scottish bank notes is not legal tender but if Scotland became independent and had it's own currency, then it would be legal tender, Scotland still has £100 notes, here is a video I made about the Scottish bank notes which can be used anywhere in the UK ua-cam.com/video/zxVH_dtac5s/v-deo.html

  • @robertfoulkes1832
    @robertfoulkes1832 2 роки тому +9

    It's also worth remembering that dollars and pounds aren't exactly equivalent in value.
    Currently, £1 is worth about $1.30.
    The Euro is closer in value to the US dollar. €1 is worth $1.08

    • @MoanaOnCrack
      @MoanaOnCrack 2 роки тому

      It's not really 'worth remembering' if they're only in the UK for 2 weeks.

    • @robertfoulkes1832
      @robertfoulkes1832 2 роки тому

      @@MoanaOnCrack whether it matters to THEM on THIS trip isn't the point.
      They're comparing and contrasting currencies, and giving anyone watching the impression that e.g. the Bank of England £10 note is the equivalent of the US $10 bill.
      UK pounds and US dollars AREN'T equivalent in value, which might very well be important for many of their VIEWERS to realise
      Also, an obvious experience they will have on their trip is to compare the apparent costs of various items & services on both sides of the pond, when those different values become very significant

    • @heidihorler6963
      @heidihorler6963 2 роки тому +1

      @@MoanaOnCrack well I think it is important as could get confusing

    • @MoanaOnCrack
      @MoanaOnCrack 2 роки тому

      @@heidihorler6963 Not really all the prices are shown in shops just give them the amount asked for there's no need to get technical and this Robert wanker is just having a hissy fit

  • @567891100
    @567891100 2 роки тому +9

    That was funny, watching you two constantly taking the money from each other. Its mine, no mine, no mine. LOL.

  • @stevehaynes4327
    @stevehaynes4327 2 роки тому +14

    I promise to pay the bearer is not to do with gold but silver, which is why the British currency is also known as sterling as in 'sterling silver'. Originally 0ne pound was more or less an IOU for one pound of sterling silver.

    • @AlmightyCRJ
      @AlmightyCRJ 2 роки тому

      The predecimal pound was descended from the Librae. The pound symbol is still a scale (viewed side on) £ ⚖

    • @jojeffrie962
      @jojeffrie962 2 роки тому

      Never knew that, great

    • @andyxox4168
      @andyxox4168 2 роки тому

      Rubbish, the UK currency was backed by gold, you can google it and correct your understanding maybe!

    • @stevehaynes4327
      @stevehaynes4327 2 роки тому

      Not rubbish , you should goggle it before advising others. Source wikipedia. " The origins of sterling lie in the reign of King Offa of Mercia (757-796) who introduced a sterling coin, made by physically dividing a tower pound of silver into 240 parts".
      Further " The silver basis of the pound sterling remained essentially unchanged until the 1816 introduction of the gold standard"
      So there we have it a link to the gold standard just over 1000 years after the currency based upon silver was conceived.
      OK apology accepted

    • @andyxox4168
      @andyxox4168 2 роки тому

      @@stevehaynes4327 .. that wasn’t U.K. currency!

  • @ThatGuy_92
    @ThatGuy_92 2 роки тому +19

    Alan Turing on the £50 note is fairly recent, I remember a few years ago we got to vote on it, of course as a gay man who is a computer scientist I voted for Alan Turing, and I'm so happy he won! For what he did for the country during WW2 and how he was treated was aweful! It's not much, but at least it's continuing his legacy!

    • @maverickslastoddworld6476
      @maverickslastoddworld6476 2 роки тому +1

      I just watched the movie about him, I liked it 😁

    • @siobhantalbot9403
      @siobhantalbot9403 2 роки тому +2

      I feel so ashamed of our ancestors. But then I realise that if I had lived in that same culture I would have been similarly brainwashed and might have been just as afraid and hateful. I'm so glad I live in more enlightened times. And so glad that you do, too. And also my son. God protect you both.

    • @joshuaaaron125
      @joshuaaaron125 2 роки тому +2

      I think it’s slightly insulting that they put him on the £50, a bill that isn’t widely accepted in shops.
      He should’ve been on another, more common, bill

    • @ixopo6715
      @ixopo6715 2 роки тому +1

      He also won the BBC 2019 vote as the greatest person of the 20th century.

    • @G1NZOU
      @G1NZOU 2 роки тому +1

      @@joshuaaaron125 True it would have been cooler for him to have been on one of the more commonly seen notes, but it's still really cool that he's visible and celebrated.

  • @improvesheffield4824
    @improvesheffield4824 2 роки тому +39

    The reason for the different sized notes is so that blind people know what they’re handling. Same with the strong colour difference between the notes. It’s so that visually impaired people can make a distinction between the different notes. Same with the coins regarding size.
    Word to the wise; many places are still reluctant to handle cash due to COVID. They prefer digital payments but will probably take cash if there’s no alternative.

    •  2 роки тому +1

      Everyone is visually impaired if the light is bad… in a club for example. Or any other not-absolutely-blindingly-brightly-lighted venue.
      You all claim this blind people thing, but I don't expect anyone to actually provide proof.

    • @NoudlePipW
      @NoudlePipW 2 роки тому

      I think American cards have a bit of an issue outside of America. We use tap or chip&pin but there's something weird about American cards... they're not as handy. My brother-in-law is from Buffalo and my dad moved to American yearrrrs ago and they explained it to me but I can't remember sorry ha

    • @NoudlePipW
      @NoudlePipW 2 роки тому

      @ You can't see the proof. You're blind to the proof.

    • @mrmessy7334
      @mrmessy7334 2 роки тому

      @ Proof of what? That having different size notes makes it easier for blind people to handle money? I would have thought that was blindingly obvious.

    • @Robr1701
      @Robr1701 2 роки тому +1

      @ Proof ! , they have braille on them .

  • @timelordtardis
    @timelordtardis 2 роки тому +11

    One interesting place to visit in London is the Bank of England museum. Amongst the things on show are the evolution of British currency and the security on the notes. There's a real gold ingot that you are invited to attempt to lift. It's held quite securely.

  • @ianbrown4411
    @ianbrown4411 2 роки тому +2

    The thickness of the coins is quite important. They are designed so that a 2p is exactly twice the weight of a 1p and a 10p is twice the weight of a 5p. So they can be weighed together to allow them to be counted quicker in shops and banks

    • @DSN262
      @DSN262 2 роки тому +1

      And what about the 20p

  • @stevenlowe3026
    @stevenlowe3026 2 роки тому +20

    The plastic notes were invented in Australia, with watermarks and holograms, and they worked so well that the world has followed. They also go through the washing machine without damage . . .

    • @101xraydelta
      @101xraydelta 2 роки тому +5

      dont look to good when they been in a dryer lol

    • @edwardwise5100
      @edwardwise5100 2 роки тому

      There made in Wigton in the North of England along with the Australian notes.

    • @Flatkatsi
      @Flatkatsi 2 роки тому +1

      @@edwardwise5100 Australian banknotes are made by the Reserve Bank of Australia at a site in Victoria, not in the UK.

    • @edwardwise5100
      @edwardwise5100 2 роки тому

      @@Flatkatsi Maybe but we do / have made some of them here in the UK. I say we make the notes, it's the plastic then they get shipped off to the next place were they get printed. Innova Films factory Wigton.

    • @Flatkatsi
      @Flatkatsi 2 роки тому

      @@edwardwise5100 The polymer substrate (the plastic) is made by Innova Films, but the banknotes themselves are made in Australia.

  • @EvilSoupDragon
    @EvilSoupDragon 2 роки тому +10

    As others have pointed out you want to go to a bank when you get here and change the £50 note, as it’s hard to get anywhere to accept it.
    If you are going to Scotland bear in mind they issue their own notes, that look very different. While they are a valid currency in the rest of the U.K., and are effectively interchangeable with the Bank of England issued notes, you may find some shops outside of Scotland are wary of accepting them.
    The 2p coin is the equivalent of 2cents, as there is a larger bi-metal £2 coin.
    Some slang you may find useful:
    Quid is the slang term for pound, and is quite common, so don’t be surprised if some tells you the value of something in ‘quid’.

    • @vereybowring
      @vereybowring 2 роки тому +2

      I used to holiday in Northern Italy. Many shops there were happy to accept Scottish bank notes but refused English ones (nobody was forging Scottish notes) lol

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 роки тому +1

      In my nearly 55 years, I've never had a problem with spending Scottish notes in England. There is sometimes a hesitation, particularly with young staff who don't see Scottish notes very often.

    • @EvilSoupDragon
      @EvilSoupDragon 2 роки тому

      @@Thurgosh_OG I suspect that’s the main reason people encounter the problem.

    • @Markus117d
      @Markus117d 2 роки тому

      @@EvilSoupDragon Exactly, I've never seen a Scottish note, And would be very wary of excepting one because i would have not enough familiarity to spot a counterfeit one..Although like most people i probably wouldn't spot a fake UK one without a very close look lol..Good thing I've never worked behind a till. 🤣

    • @OurnameisLegion66
      @OurnameisLegion66 2 роки тому +4

      Scottish notes are not legal tender, not even in Scotland.. They are commercially owned as opposed to government owned.

  • @exeterjedi6730
    @exeterjedi6730 2 роки тому +11

    The 50p, 10p, 5p and 2p used to be bigger. When I was young there were still one and two shilling coins which were interchangeable with the 5p and 10p. We've introduced £1 and £2 coins because they last longer than paper money. The £1 had a major redesign recently over to the bimetal version.

    • @picklerick4944
      @picklerick4944 2 роки тому +3

      The 2p hasn't changed since its introduction in 1971

    • @TheWizardOfEgo
      @TheWizardOfEgo 2 роки тому +1

      When I was a kid the 10 bob coin would kill a man if you threw it at him

    • @TimMiller
      @TimMiller Рік тому +1

      Indeed. We used to have to take a wheelbarrow to the shops if we were expecting to get any 50p coins in our change.

    • @exeterjedi6730
      @exeterjedi6730 Рік тому

      @@TimMiller they should phase out the bronze 1 and 2 ps now.

  • @josefschiltz2192
    @josefschiltz2192 2 роки тому +6

    Joseph Mallord William Turner - 1775-1851 - is one of my favourite artists and he was born in Covent Garden, London, the son of William Turner of Devon (1745-1829), a barber and wig-maker and his wife, Mary -nee Marshall, whose family had great success in the butcher's trade. His father encouraged his son's work by displaying it in his shop. There are books of his work, including fascimiles of his European tour sketchbooks, one particularly beautiful one of Venice. Amongst his more famous works is The Fighting Temeraire. the 98 gun HMS Temeraire, one of the last second-rate ships of the line that had a role in the Battle of Trafalgar, being towed to it's final berth at Rotherhith to be turned into scrap. The painting, an oil-on-canvas, was exhibited at The Royal Academy in 1839.

  • @fil_britbunnyboi872
    @fil_britbunnyboi872 2 роки тому +27

    Turner is one of Britain's most renowned painters and mostly known for his colourful and vivid depiction of British landscapes/ countryside.
    Also, if you arrange the pence coins in a particular way, it forms the Royal coat of arms 😉

  • @Talkathon408
    @Talkathon408 Рік тому +1

    It's worth noting that they have different note designs in Scotland and also Northern Ireland I believe. There's also technically a £100 Scottish note that's legal tender but I've never seen it myself.

  • @njebs.
    @njebs. 2 роки тому +35

    Haha I've actually never seen the new £50 note, businesses very very rarely accept them for some reason, and cash machines will -always- _almost always_ give you a maximum nomination of £20 for any amount of money.
    Also I think one of the reasons why our notes are different sizes is so that is clearer when presenting money to someone what notes are being handed over. Typically you'd have the largest value notes at the bottom, so you're able to see all the different stacks without having to fan it out.

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 2 роки тому +1

      when i was in london i withdrew 200 pounds, and it gave me it in 50 pound notes

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 2 роки тому

      i then went to the pub bought half a beer, and gave him the 50 quid note lol

    • @KentRoads
      @KentRoads 2 роки тому

      Most common denomination faked, dumb reason to not accept them though

    • @KentRoads
      @KentRoads 2 роки тому +3

      @@cyberash3000 atm's dont tend to have £50's 0.o

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 2 роки тому +1

      @@KentRoads this one did it was opposite burrough market in london

  • @ianjardine7324
    @ianjardine7324 2 роки тому +11

    The "chip" in our bank notes is a simple RF circuit like you see in key cards which allows machines to scan the note and the return signal tells the machine the value it makes counterfeiting very hard and makes designing ATM's vending machines and any other cash related technology much simpler and more reliable.

    • @boofuls
      @boofuls 2 роки тому

      Every days a school 🏫 day 👍

  • @liukin95
    @liukin95 2 роки тому +4

    Just so you know, if you take a £50 note into a shop the shop assistant normally has to get their manager to check over it before accepting it. There's been issues of fraudsters attempting to remake them for a number of years so don't be offended if you come across this, just go with the flow 😊

  • @Cinesta76
    @Cinesta76 2 роки тому +20

    When you get to the UK go into a bank and swap your £50 notes. Not many places like to take them. The notes were designed the way they are to help against counterfeits. And the 2pence is Like 2cents not 2 pounds. We do have a £2 coin that is gold and silver.

    • @hanRox693
      @hanRox693 2 роки тому +3

      Yes I agree, a lot of shops will act strange if you produce a £50. £20 is normally the highest note you will see

    • @EvilSoupDragon
      @EvilSoupDragon 2 роки тому +2

      I was thinking the same. The £50 is rarely used because a lot of shops don’t accept them.

    • @that_lewis_guy6953
      @that_lewis_guy6953 2 роки тому +3

      The new £50 is good tho because they except that.

    • @deano2506
      @deano2506 2 роки тому

      Absolute nonsesnse, I often get paid in £50 notes and never have a problem spending them.
      Shops seem check them more than any other note despite the fact you really don't get counterfeit 50's.

    • @timeplayertr
      @timeplayertr 2 роки тому

      I work in a shop and we accept £50 all the time we just have to check them more carefully, and we get paid in them alot as workmen and builders tend to get paid in them.

  • @ronkelley5348
    @ronkelley5348 2 роки тому +8

    Since Covid, contactless has become the way most of us pay for most things using debit cards (obviously chip and PIN is available). Avoid £50 notes - outside of London they're uncommon. £20 is the commonest high denomination note in general use.

  • @pauljstephens
    @pauljstephens 2 роки тому

    And FYI - Modern polymer banknotes were first developed by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) and The University of Melbourne. They were first issued as currency in Australia during 1988 (coinciding with Australia's bicentennial year); by 1996, the Australian dollar was switched completely to polymer banknotes. Romania was the first country in Europe to issue a plastic note in 1999 and became the third country after Australia and New Zealand to fully convert to polymer by 2003.
    Other currencies that have been switched completely to polymer banknotes include: the Vietnamese đồng (2006) although this is only applied to banknotes with denominations above 10,000 đồng, the Brunei dollar (2006), the Nigerian Naira (2007), the Papua New Guinean kina (2008), the Canadian dollar (2013), the Maldivian rufiyaa (2017), the Mauritanian ouguiya (2017), the Nicaraguan córdoba (2017), the Vanuatu vatu (2017), the Eastern Caribbean dollar (2019) and the Pound sterling (2021).

  • @fallyoverguy
    @fallyoverguy 2 роки тому +15

    Be aware that those are only Bank of England bank notes (bills). Scotland and Northern Ireland have multiple different decorations to their bills which look very different from the Bank of England version. Even through the Scottish and Northern Irish money doesn't look the same, they have the same value.
    Here's a video showing the Scottish bank notes ua-cam.com/video/iZDLhrwteKM/v-deo.html
    Northern Irish bank notes video:
    ua-cam.com/video/sWDF4itt-n0/v-deo.html

    • @fog8251
      @fog8251 2 роки тому +6

      Yeah, it's not just the Bank of England that prints money in the UK. There's different versions from the Bank of Scotland, Royal Bank of Scotland, Clydesdale Bank, Northern Bank (Danske Bank), Ulster Bank and Bank of Ireland.

    • @amyw6808
      @amyw6808 2 роки тому +7

      I love the Scottish notes - beautiful illustrations of otters, squirrels etc

    • @ghughesarch
      @ghughesarch 2 роки тому +2

      Scottish and Irish notes are not legal tender and shops (etc) in England and Wales can (and frequently do) refuse to accept them. Banks will exchange them though.
      Bank of England notes are accepted in Scotland, however.

    • @drewfinlay3618
      @drewfinlay3618 2 роки тому +1

      @@fog8251 you say that yet in England, Scotland and Wales I struggle to find shops that will accept my Northern Irish notes and in England especially they seem to only accept BOE notes. Northern Ireland however we will accept anything as long as it is from the UK, although some areas also accept Euros

    • @andyxox4168
      @andyxox4168 2 роки тому +1

      No it can’t and Scottish notes are not legal tender in England (or strangely in Scotland where only minted coins are acceptable). Scottish notes are actually mere ‘promissory notes’ issued by 3 Scottish banks and backed by English notes or gold of equivalent value.
      Shopkeepers in the UK may however accept what they like in exchange for goods.

  • @thepetermullins
    @thepetermullins 2 роки тому +12

    You are exactly right about the size thing, it's really helpful for the visually impaired. My dad is blind and can still use cash because he knows the sizes by touch.

  • @HanOfGod13
    @HanOfGod13 2 роки тому +6

    Although "Pence" is the correct term, almost no one in the UK says Pence, we just use the letter P.
    So it would be 1p (1 Pee), 2p (2 Pee) etc.
    Pounds and Quid are usually interchangeable in conversation, like Dollars and Bucks in the US.

    • @cbjones82
      @cbjones82 2 роки тому

      I'd call a 1p coin a penny still. Think a lot of people would. I'd say it was a "penny" or a "1p coin"

    • @HanOfGod13
      @HanOfGod13 2 роки тому

      @@cbjones82 for the 1p, penny can be used like in the US. I was commenting on the common language usuage of all Pence coins in Britain, which would be "P" rather than Pence. You could use P for the 1p, but you wouldn't use "penny" when using any coin higher than 1p (some "may" say a 2 penny coin...but I wouldn't say it's common place).

    • @cbjones82
      @cbjones82 2 роки тому +1

      @@HanOfGod13 I say 20p now. In retail years ago I'd ask the customer for 20 pence. I use them now interchangeably

    • @mantrashak
      @mantrashak 2 роки тому

      Penny is singular. So 1 penny. Pence is plural. So 2 pence.

    • @blotski
      @blotski 2 роки тому +2

      I think I'm old enough to know why. Back in 1971 when I was a child we changed our system of money from a complicated combination of pounds, shillings and pence to just having pounds and pence. Under the old system the abbreviation for a penny was the letter 'd' (something to do with latin I think) so ten pence would be written 10d. With the new money the abbreviation for penny changed to 'p' so ten pence became 10p. As the values also changed 10d was not worth the same as 10p so when talking about money in the early days of the change over it became common to call the new pennies 'pee' to make it clear you meant new pence. In fact, I can also recall people saying, for example, 'twenty new pence'. Obviously, 20 pee is easier to say. For some reason this habit stuck. I've always found it to sound a bit silly and often use the words penny and pence myself. But that might be my age.

  • @TheStv89
    @TheStv89 2 роки тому +26

    Definitely stay away from the £50 note guys, They are very hard to spend in the UK as a lot of businesses will refuse to take them as they are scared of being left with forgeries.

    • @miff227
      @miff227 2 роки тому +1

      Though, they were the easiest to tell if they were forgeries as they were normally more pristine and the ink that should rub off does rub off (I used to joke with customers that "this one's still wet!").
      Of course that's the old style. New style needs a laser pointer to check I guess.

    • @helenwood8482
      @helenwood8482 2 роки тому +4

      That is no longer true as the new £50 is virtually impossible to forge. I have seen a forged version of the new £20 note and it looked as if it had been done by a child.

    • @TheStv89
      @TheStv89 2 роки тому

      @@helenwood8482 I still will NOT accept one.

    • @spooony2714
      @spooony2714 2 роки тому

      @@TheStv89 why?

    • @Markus117d
      @Markus117d 2 роки тому

      I believe that in part it has to do with the differences in values, ie buying something that costs £10 with a £50 would be next to impossible. But i am not sure if they would be as reluctant to accept a £50 if you were buying something priced at £60 or £70 for example.. 🤔

  • @davidholden2658
    @davidholden2658 2 роки тому +34

    £50 notes are pretty rare, I can't remember the last time I saw one. A lot of shops don't like to accept them as they're the most commonly forged note. The 2p coin is worth 2 pennies, not two pounds. we do have £1 and £2 coins but you don't seem to have any. The shape of the 20p and 50p coins is to help the visually impaired as is the size and colour of the notes. You'll notice that the 5p and 10p coins have milled edges unlike the 1p and 2p coins, again this helps the visually impaired although originally silver coins had milled edges to deter people shaving the edges off pure silver coins. You won't need much actual cash in the UK as virtually everywhere accepts contactless payments now, there are even some small businesses that don't accept cash.
    Also, the bit that says "I promise to pay the bearer on demand the sum of twenty pounds" refers to the Bank of England not the Queen. You can see the Governor of the Bank of England's name and signature in the top left corner. It used to mean you could exchange the note for £20 of gold, now it means you can exchange an old, out of circulation note for a current note.
    J.M.W. Turner is one of Britain's most famous artists. They started putting famous people on the notes in 1990 and they change them every few years.

    • @jase6709
      @jase6709 2 роки тому +5

      They were commonly forged in paper form. I've had plenty of the plastic £50 notes and have had no trouble spending them.

    • @gazgrill3700
      @gazgrill3700 2 роки тому +2

      Agree with Jase. The old paper £50 note had a bad reputation, but the new one looks fabulous, and is so new that there won't be many forgeries yet.

    • @scottirvine121
      @scottirvine121 2 роки тому

      Almost everyone accepts them and it’s not the most copied, it’s the risk to a business is far higher of getting it wrong.bad inflation increases £50 become more common

    • @whitedwarf4986
      @whitedwarf4986 2 роки тому

      The first famous person used on a Bank of England note was William Shakespeare on the back of the B318 £20 note from 1970. The second was Florence Nightingale on the back of the B330 £10 note in 1975. There was a few more before 1990.

    • @paulmurgatroyd6372
      @paulmurgatroyd6372 2 роки тому

      @@jase6709 Yeah a lot of fish and chip shops refused to take the £50.🤣

  • @richardcardwell8882
    @richardcardwell8882 2 роки тому +1

    We do actually have a £100 note but it's very rarely used, plus we also have £5, £20, £50 and £100 coins which are classed as commemorative coins to be collected but are still legal tender

  • @paulhanson5164
    @paulhanson5164 2 роки тому +58

    I've almost forgotten what its like to use cash, just about everywhere here in the UK is contactless now, either with a phone app or bank card. I've even seen places that no longer accept cash.
    Sad really as I don't like the idea of a cashless society but with cash machines getting ever rarer trying to get cash can be a pain.

    • @alanjay981
      @alanjay981 2 роки тому +5

      About a year back there was a news item that said around midday possibly about Million people in supermarkets across the country & elsewhere could not pay for there food at the checkout because the main data bank processor had broken down & lasted for several hours.They had to leave there trolley's & go home.Only people with cash could buy food.If we head for a cashless society & there's a big malfunction or cyber attack, what then.Nobody can guarantee this won't happen. All the best.

    • @TrashskillsRS
      @TrashskillsRS 2 роки тому +1

      Similarly in Denmark the last time people bought anything with bills or coins back in like 2015. Many businesses are even pushing to be able to decline cash.
      Even at various Festivals or Faires you are unable to pay in cash and need to make a debit or credit transfer.

    • @davidbell8320
      @davidbell8320 2 роки тому +8

      The push towards controlling our money digitally and by definition "people"

    • @Dave.Thatcher1
      @Dave.Thatcher1 2 роки тому +2

      @@davidbell8320 Absolutely!!!

    • @martinconnelly1473
      @martinconnelly1473 2 роки тому +1

      I hardly handle cash anymore. The thing that surprises me is that in the USA (I believe) you can't go into a banking app on your phone/computer and pay a bill directly to the account of the person you owe the money to (BACS system). This is why I no longer use much in the way of coins or notes. If I am going to a country that uses Euros (or a number of other currencies such as US dollars) I have a multicurrency cash passport card that I preload with Euros. When I am there I can reload more money as required using the online app. I get a far better exchange rate doing this than you can get at airports or tourist areas. Using a phone that is unlocked biometrically makes contactless payments safer than using a card. I would prefer a biometrically locked card as well but they are not generally available yet.

  • @jamesmnaylor
    @jamesmnaylor 2 роки тому +31

    We got rid of the £1 note in 80s due it it being easy to counterfeit. I wish we could bring it back now it is extremely hard to counterfeit the new notes. I hate having so many coins in my pocket.
    Turner is a famous painter from the 18th century known for many of his works of romantic paintings.
    Alan Turing has only recently been put onto the back of the £50note as the old ones have only just been phased out, although some shops don’t except £50 due to again how easy it was to counterfeit the old notes which remained in circulation until recently.

    • @davidholden2658
      @davidholden2658 2 роки тому +7

      It wasn't due to counterfeiting it was because notes wear out so quickly and it was easier for vending machines to take a £1 coin than a £1 note. The coins cost more to make but last 50 times as long so overall they're more cost effective to produce.

    • @billythedog-309
      @billythedog-309 2 роки тому +1

      19th century for the most part.

    • @jamesmnaylor
      @jamesmnaylor 2 роки тому

      @@billythedog-309 true.

    • @daveofyorkshire301
      @daveofyorkshire301 2 роки тому

      Thank the Australians for plastic currency, they pioneered it and we followed them as it proved more robust and harder to forge... Although forgery isn't as easy as you make out, the paper alone was almost impossible to duplicate never mind the water mark and ribbon..

    • @jamesmnaylor
      @jamesmnaylor 2 роки тому

      @@daveofyorkshire301 I don't mind how the new notes look and feel. If it leads to more notes and less coins.

  • @radicaladz
    @radicaladz 2 роки тому +1

    Most of the features of modern pound notes are either accessibility/qualify of life features to make them more durable and easy to use and recognise, or to prevent fraud. It used to be that, when dealing with cash at my casino, we'd have to mark bills with a pen to tell if they're fake, which leads to a lot of false negatives slipping through, or holding them under a black light to check for hallmarks, which is slow and cumbersome when you're dealing with bulk. The hologram windows are part of this, but the notes also have serial numbers, watermarks, UV activated ink - all the bells and whistles when it comes to making it harder to forge them.

  • @petercsre
    @petercsre 2 роки тому +5

    Remember Scotland has it's own notes, including a £100 note.

    • @donvanvliet9477
      @donvanvliet9477 2 роки тому

      Yes but not legal tender, anywhere.

    • @bradforever10
      @bradforever10 2 роки тому

      @@donvanvliet9477 Legal tender is a very specific term for a legal setting, in certain circumstances certain English currency also wouldn't be 'legal tender' as its to do with which denominations of currency are acceptable for paying a debt.
      However, even if it did mean what you think it means, you're wrong. While many shops won't accept them due to the inconvenience and having a right to refuse payment, they are in fact perfectly legal to use in the rest of the UK

    • @donvanvliet9477
      @donvanvliet9477 2 роки тому

      @@bradforever10 Im fully aware of the definition of legal tender, which is not relevant for day to day use and also the limits but those limits only apply to coins and that is irrelevant here. In particular, you seem to think that I am saying that because something isnt 'legal tender' then it is not legal to use it. I am not saying that, a shop can accept or reject any bits of paper or tokens it wants in payment, so long the shop keeper has confidence in whoever issued the paper or the token. Legal tender only comes into play when offering to settle a debt in full and the creditor cant then sue for payment. But the concept is important because it gives holders of legal tender confidence as to the value and safety of the notes. Also, it is important for our US friends to understand the difference because all US bank notes are Legal Tender and they may not be aware of the concept of a bank note not having that status.
      Various legislation over time, the first in 1833, gave the BoE the sole right to issue notes that were Legal Tender but this only covered England & Wales (for notes). All other banks' notes are negotiable instruments and have the legal status of promissory notes, no more. This has the surprising outcome that in NI and Scotland no notes at all have the status of 'Legal Tender' (not even BoE) but the notes in issue have the confidence of the holders. So, with respect, I am right.

  • @Hieronymous69
    @Hieronymous69 2 роки тому +13

    One thing that you might like to be aware of is that the price labelled on goods (barring errors) is the price that you pay. There is no additional cost at the checkout.

    • @dinerouk
      @dinerouk 2 роки тому

      IOW, the tax is pre-paid!

    • @0Zed0
      @0Zed0 2 роки тому +1

      @@dinerouk I think pre-calculated would be a better way to describe it as the customer still pays it.

    • @sirderam1
      @sirderam1 2 роки тому

      @@0Zed0
      Tax is included in the price tag on the item, might be best.

  • @TimMiller
    @TimMiller Рік тому

    Something else which I don't think anyone has commented on: the 1p coin weighs exactly half the weight of a 2p coin; and the the 5p coin is half the weight of a 10p coin. This means that you can just put all your copper coins together and weight them to see how much you have.

  • @SavageIntent
    @SavageIntent 2 роки тому +7

    Scotland and Northern Ireland have their own notes. They are worth exactly the same as the English notes, and the Scottish ones in particular look cooler than the English ones.

    • @AnderEvermore
      @AnderEvermore 2 роки тому +1

      They are also technically illegal tender as legally on Bank of England notes are legal. However, then again legal tender is just what a shop keeper accepts as payment.

    • @ukguy
      @ukguy 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah good luck trying to spend a Scottish note in an English shop lol

    • @AnderEvermore
      @AnderEvermore 2 роки тому +1

      @@ukguy I used to work at a chip shop and during rush hour at the shop a women came in and was all Karen like demanding her Scottish tender was legal I our shop 9n the South Coast of England. As it was extremely busy I said it wasn't and she could either pay with a valid note, she didn't have any and her food was ready so I just took the note, pocketed it and paid myself for the food to keep the line of customers moving. Luckily, I collect banknotes and coins and didn't have that note yet.

    • @pamelaadam9207
      @pamelaadam9207 2 роки тому

      @@ukguy it happens i never change my notes. I stand my ground

    • @watfordjc
      @watfordjc 2 роки тому

      @@AnderEvermore Debit cards, credit cards, Apple Pay, Google Pay, and cheques aren't legal tender either. Scottish and Northern Irish bank notes are perfectly valid for payment in England, and I say that as someone that worked at Sainsbury's and HSBC. All such notes are backed by deposits at the Bank of England - it's why the £1 million note and the £100 million note exist.

  • @amynehls4175
    @amynehls4175 2 роки тому +16

    Travelling to the states (pre plague) I found myself getting very annoyed with the currency all being the same size & colour. Especially in low light areas or at night it really slowed me down when paying. The texture reminds me of playing monopoly 😂

    • @andyxox4168
      @andyxox4168 2 роки тому

      … you never know what (note) you’re pulling out in a titty bar … 😂😂😂

  • @tn_onyoutube8436
    @tn_onyoutube8436 2 роки тому

    I’m sure others have commented, mainly a point or two at a time, but to cover some of the points I noted when watching:
    - the notes are indeed different sizes so as to help visually impaired people, aside from the Braille
    - I don’t know the dates it happened but we have not had a £100 in my memory and I have never seen one (I am 60).
    - however, to open up an entirely new can of worms, the Bank of Scotland DO have a £100 note, and issue all the other same denominations as the Bank of England notes you showed. These are technically legal currency but some shops may refuse to take them (though they are not allowed to refuse)
    - there are no “chips” in any of the notes, just various sorts of security holograms and inclusions to make counterfeiting more difficult
    - the coin you thought was a £2 (two pound) was in fact a 2p (two pence), just 2 pennies. There is a much, much bigger £2 coin and a £1 coin that is smaller than the £2 but still very thick
    - the £50 note is widely used, but is not very common to see in daily use. Some smaller shops may refuse to take them, due to the monetary risk if it turns out to be a fake. Legally they are not allowed to refuse, but some do refuse to accept them.
    - when taking cash out of an ATM a you will almost always only get £10 and £20 notes. I have never, ever received any other denomination, though I do believe that some ATMs on college campuses and nearby do give out £5 notes
    - the 1p and 2p coins, and increasingly the 5p coin are becoming every less used, as prices negate their benefit. Though many shops do still stick to the £x.99 pricing point for goods, so you will end up with some, but then will find it difficult to find the right time and place to use them and will probably end up with a pocket full of them!
    - the 50p coin is widely used, as are the 10p and 20p, and even more so the £1 and to a lesser degree the £2 coins
    - J M W Turner is a very famous 18th/19th Century English painter, just as Jane Austen is a famous author.
    - all the notes are plastic now, as you saw. This has only happened in the last few years. You can still come across older style £20 notes (which are even bigger than the current £20) but try to avoid them as some shops think they are no longer legal tender, though they are.
    - the notes are made of a plastic polymer which many people think of as indestructible- but they are not. They have an expected life of 5 years as opposed to 2 years for the old paper/linen notes.
    - final point - all this talk of notes and coins is fun and interesting, and of course these things are legal tender everywhere, but in practice we mainly use credit or debit cards, mostly in contactless format (up to £100 per transaction, you need to use the chip and PIN for higher amounts). I know people who literally now never use cash and it is somewhat unusual to pay larger amounts using cash anymore. Or our Apple or Samsung Pay features on our phones! One key example of this is the fact that you cannot pay for bus or subway (tube) tickets in London with cash - you have to buy a ticket from a machine ahead of time, buy a multi use “Oyster” card, or touch on and off a service using a credit, debit or phone transaction.

  • @cheryla7480
    @cheryla7480 2 роки тому +7

    I’m so excited for you guys! I hope you have the trip of a lifetime! The last time I was there was1970. I went to visit my grandmother and assorted other relatives. You are lucky the £ notes have changed. When I went they were all the same length but wow the width was way bigger. They looked ridiculous in my wallet (sort of half in half out). In Canada we got rid of our one and two dollar bills a while ago. We have coins: The loonie=one dollar and the toonie=two dollars. We no longer mint Pennie’s and our paper currency is made of the same materials as the British ones. I know Scotland used to also have its own currency, but you didn’t need to switch from the British. There is so much to see there. I really loved Wales, my aunt and uncle lived there in a 400 year old farmhouse, it was beautiful.

    • @nobbynobbynoob
      @nobbynobbynoob 2 роки тому +1

      British currency was still "LSD" - pre decimal - in 1970 as well, so the ten-shilling note was a thing. After decimalization, there was still a ½p coin but it used to annoy my Mum due to its low purchasing power, but ironically that bought more than the 1p & 2p pieces can today.

    • @stevenbalekic5683
      @stevenbalekic5683 2 роки тому

      How long ago did you guys stop making 1 and 2 dollar notes?
      In Australia we started making $1 coins in 1984 and $2 coins in 1988.
      1c and 2c coins were discontinued in 1992.

    • @chrisinnes2128
      @chrisinnes2128 2 роки тому

      Scotland still has its own banknotes but uk ones are used here too and as a lot of people have already pointed out 2 pence is not the equivalent of $2 but 2 cents

  • @albro666
    @albro666 2 роки тому +14

    No-one ever uses the £50 note, this is the first time I’ve seen one of the new ones before so we don’t see ANY need for having a £100 note, it’s just excessive

    • @cbjones82
      @cbjones82 2 роки тому

      I remember about 15 years ago when we went to the US when a pound was worth about 2 USD. So back then a £50 was worth a 100 dollar bill, and we didn't seem to need a note of higher value since then... unless you're in Scotland of course!

    • @danielgriffin9986
      @danielgriffin9986 2 роки тому

      Well as someone who works in retail, I can tell you £50 notes are pretty common.

  • @Rob_Morrison_GB
    @Rob_Morrison_GB 2 роки тому +2

    I'm british and i have never seen a polymer £50 note until now!!! :D Also 50p coins are widely circulated and used in the UK, and the 50p have the widest variety of designs on their reverse than any other coin by far! Quite a few are commemorative but all are still legal tender apart from the older 50p coins made before 1997.

  • @superted6960
    @superted6960 2 роки тому +5

    Interesting fact. Because the Queen has been on the throne for so long, all our current notes and coins bear an image of her head on one side. Before decimalisation (1971) it was commonplace to see coins bearing the heads of previous monarchs, and dated accordingly. When Charles becomes King his head will, of course, start to appear, but old coins with the Queen on them won't routinely be taken out of circulation. Notes tend not to last too long anyway, so those with the Queen on them might disappear fairly quickly. I wonder if the Bank of England/Royal Mint have already prepared new designs against the day. Probably.

    • @ThomasCostigan
      @ThomasCostigan 2 роки тому

      I do believe Charles has posed for his portrait several times at this point.

    • @dasy2k1
      @dasy2k1 2 роки тому +1

      He will also be facing the other direction (on the coins at least) as they always alternate direction with each monarch so Charles will be facing left...
      When you look at old pre decimal coins most will have left facing heads as George V and George VI are by far the most common ones around. Edward VII wasn't on the throne long enough to actually have coins enter circulation properly but as they had produced some (facing right) it swapped back for George VI

  • @butIwantpewee
    @butIwantpewee 2 роки тому +10

    When it comes to cash familiarity is really important I think, when I visited the states I hated how all the notes looked the same to me. It's probably instinctive to Americans when trying to tell the difference but I spent the entire holiday paranoid I was somehow going to waste a $100 bill thinking it was a $1 bill. With our notes all looking so different I don't have that problem lol.

  • @ccityplanner1217
    @ccityplanner1217 2 роки тому

    We have a 2p coin, which is massive. The reason is because we used to have a ½p coin, & they made the 2p really big so it would be four times the weight of the ½p coin, so banks could use the same counting machine for both denominations.
    When there were 240 pence to the pound, we had coins at 1/20 (shilling), ⅒ (florin) & ¼ (crown). In 1970, when the penny was revalued from 1/12 of a shilling to ⅕ of a shilling, the £¼ coin was changed to £⅕ so that all coins would be divisible by each other.

  • @EclecticInstinct
    @EclecticInstinct 2 роки тому +11

    I live in the UK and I rarely use physical currency these days. My exceptions are for some tipping and paying my window cleaner. Otherwise, I use my Apple watch contactlessly for most everything on a daily basis, including collecting Costa Coffee points. I will use my debit/credit cards (chip and pin) for large purchases. Like previous comments, I cannot remember the last time I saw a £50 note. I suggest you walk into any high street bank once you are here and ask then to break it down to lower denominations, which they will do for free. Finally, if you ever need to visit a Dr, come to Scotland as there are no prescription charges.

    • @tinescot8779
      @tinescot8779 2 роки тому

      Prescriptions are free to those who live in Scotland.

    • @Oxley016
      @Oxley016 2 роки тому +2

      It's not as simple as go to Scotland and everything is free, different rules for non citizens etc

  • @ElectariumTunic
    @ElectariumTunic 2 роки тому +10

    4:30 - Bills are in different sizes so that visually impaired people can know the difference, either through feel or with specially made measuring sticks
    If they all where the same size, like US Dollars, a visually impaired person wouldn't be able to tell the difference between $1 and $100
    Same reason for colour differences
    7:40 - Yes, exactly. But braile can wear with time, size will always remain

  • @kingfield99
    @kingfield99 2 роки тому +1

    The people on the back of British notes are changed every decade or so, personally I think it's great that they feature a diverse range of people and not just a bunch of dead politicians. Also the backs of our coins often have 'limited editions' to commemorate things like the Olympic Games or historical events, some of these are only issued in very small amounts and can become more valuable than the face value.

  • @brettsinclair4007
    @brettsinclair4007 2 роки тому +11

    I was given a £50 note yesterday, only the second time in my life I've had one 😆. Yet when I've been to Europe and used euros, 50 notes are a lot more common.

    • @frank9446
      @frank9446 2 роки тому +1

      In Europe, we also have 100, 200 and 500 euro notes - the latter is often referred to as a Bin Laden because you don't often see them! Although the 500 is still legal tender and in circulation, I believe they have stopped producing them. I've noticed that whilst 50 pound notes are fairly uncommon in the UK, when it comes to buying UK notes in Europe, we're often given 50's - never had a problem spending them though.

    • @KKing650
      @KKing650 2 роки тому

      @@frank9446 It's odd. They aren't in general circulation, so if we see one it is a very rare thing. If you go to a cash machine in the UK to withdraw like 250 quid, you will probably get 10 twenties and 5 tens or something like that. Not sure why the 50 is not used much.

    • @dasy2k1
      @dasy2k1 2 роки тому

      €50 is supper common unlike £50
      But the €100, €200 and €500 notes are less so... I have only seen a €500 once and the store somone was spending it in had to call the manager to get it approved...
      The biggest I have used was a €200 but even that was ridiculously large

    • @watfordjc
      @watfordjc 2 роки тому

      It's mainly because most (paper/polymer) currency in the UK enters circulation through ATMs (which tend to only hold £10 and £20 notes), the £50 is the largest denomination (in England at least), and most people buy rather than sell things (you aren't getting a £50 note in your change).
      The ATM issue is also why there is probably a 50% chance you're getting your change in coins instead of a fiver.
      I have some paper fifties my landlord gave me for something a while back that I need to get around to exchanging for polymer.

  • @glitterizedrainbow2311
    @glitterizedrainbow2311 2 роки тому +4

    50p's are quite common but do look out for them. We have different pictures on them in circulation. Peter rabbit designs, paddington bear and sports design plus many more. They were part of several series released and quite fun to look out for.

    • @frankw9619
      @frankw9619 2 роки тому +1

      Also, there are different designs of £2 coins.

  • @adammullarkey4996
    @adammullarkey4996 2 роки тому +1

    Fun fact: the difference in size between different UK notes is linear. So, for instance, the difference between the sizes of the £5 and the £10 is the same as the difference between the £10 and the £20.
    Australian notes actually do the same, but, supposedly, they also get fractionally thicker by the same ratio.

  • @pete48172
    @pete48172 2 роки тому +13

    Wouldn’t hurt to have a few quid in cash, but the pandemic has accelerated the move towards cashless here and you can pay for pretty much everything by card. In London especially, you may find some businesses that don’t accept cash - for example the bars at the punk gig I went to last weekend were card only. Even in many pubs now, which used to be the main place I last used much cash, the bar staff will hold out a card machine by default and be mildly surprised if you produce a note instead.
    Though, by “card” I mostly mean contactless, which I hear is not common with US banks. Apple Pay or Google Pay will do the same job if you have it. Definitely recommended as it really is the norm now especially in cities. I don’t remember the last time I withdrew or used cash.

    • @demonic_myst4503
      @demonic_myst4503 2 роки тому

      same like i only live in a smaller town near coventry area but most places have apple pay now no need to pull cash out hell even busses started to take card payments now

    •  2 роки тому

      A *punk gig* that requires card payment… how strange times have gotten.

    • @pete48172
      @pete48172 2 роки тому

      @ Entry tickets as QR code on your phone, cash not accepted for drinks at the three busy bars because it’s way quicker to just tap your phone or card than faff about with folding money and giving change. It’s 2022 😉

  • @richmorris2870
    @richmorris2870 2 роки тому +29

    We hardly ever use a £50 note in the UK and whenever someone gets one out there's usually a joke to the person with one about money laundering or tax evasion. I've even seen some businesses refuse to take them (pubs, small shops etc). This might have changed now they are plastic, but I'm not sure as I've never had one and as far as I'm aware you won't get them out of an ATM and have to go in to the bank to get one? The one downside to the notes being plastic is that they do slide out of your wallet/pocket much easier, so watch out for that. as I lost money in the early days of the plastic notes. Also you are correct, our notes are different sizes to help those with visual impairment or learning disabilities.

    • @ninebangtrojan4669
      @ninebangtrojan4669 2 роки тому +3

      Going back to the 90s we had to get a manager to inspect 50s before taking as payment. As for Scottish notes good luck spending them!

    • @zzirSnipzz1
      @zzirSnipzz1 2 роки тому +1

      We got £50's for weeks after the boss sold our crane for cash

    • @CezTV
      @CezTV 2 роки тому +3

      As someone from Ireland who frequently travels to the UK. Whenever I change my money before travel, I always get £50 notes. €50 notes are very common but whenever I hand over a £50 note I notice people are usually skeptical which is weird to me. There was one occasion where a shop keeper did say "Oh you aren't from the UK", he told me it's common for people outside the UK to use £50 notes. I guess the only place to get £50 notes are outside the UK lol

    • @Kaivana
      @Kaivana 2 роки тому +1

      Unless you work in a petrol station were you see 1 to 4 a day.

    • @richmorris2870
      @richmorris2870 2 роки тому

      @@Kaivana that’s a good point…. Is an exception to the rule though 👍🏻

  • @michaelmarsay586
    @michaelmarsay586 2 роки тому +2

    Dont use a £50 note unless you are buying something around the £40 plus value as these notes are not common and many smaller places will struggle to give change. Contactless payment eg applepay is accepted in most places now and is the preferred payment since covid.

    • @mantrashak
      @mantrashak 2 роки тому

      More than that, shops lose out more if the note is fake. So many won't accept anything over £20

  • @paulchilds1893
    @paulchilds1893 2 роки тому +5

    One thing I noticed travelling to the US from the UK: Card payment (particularly chip & pin or contactless) seems to be way more common in the UK. I'm not sure if that's related to the tipping/service culture in the US.

  • @michaelscott7166
    @michaelscott7166 2 роки тому +13

    Fun fact with the UK polymer notes, you can use the corners of them to play vinyl records.

    • @TheSuperlambanana
      @TheSuperlambanana 2 роки тому

      That is a genuinely fun fact I didn’t know that haha

  • @tb1271
    @tb1271 2 роки тому +2

    In all honesty, you almost never see a £50 note. Most cash machines (ATM's) don't even stock them.
    Also, the reason it has "I promise to pay the bearer on demand the sum of ..." and the reason we call them notes not bills is because they evolved from a thing called a 'promissory note'.

  • @Immhotep
    @Immhotep 2 роки тому +4

    If you set up up apple or Google pay that would be very useful for you as virtually everywhere uses contactless and chip and pin. I can't even remember paying cash for anything except like entry in a club for years and years

  • @witherkay
    @witherkay 2 роки тому +14

    Hi guys, great vid. JMW Turner was a painter in the 18th/19th century. Jane Austen was the author of many books including Pride & Prejudice. Where you guys have presidents on your notes, we have cultural and scientific figures usually. Whenever they issue a new version of a note the people on them change. So we've had Charles Dickens, Isaac Newton... There was quite a big campaign a few years ago to get Jane Austen chosen for the £10 as we'd never had a woman on a note before (apart from the Queen, obviously!)

    • @garethgriffiths1674
      @garethgriffiths1674 2 роки тому +1

      Florence Nightingale used to be on the ten pound note.....

    • @witherkay
      @witherkay 2 роки тому +1

      @@garethgriffiths1674 You make a good point. It was because there were no women currently on notes. My mistake.

    • @chrisaskin6144
      @chrisaskin6144 2 роки тому +2

      Elizabeth Fry (prison reformer) was on £5 notes (old paper ones) I think.

    • @finlaymacintyre8161
      @finlaymacintyre8161 2 роки тому

      Elizabeth Fry?

    • @chrisaskin6144
      @chrisaskin6144 2 роки тому +1

      @@finlaymacintyre8161 Elizabeth Fry (1780-1845) was from a Quaker family and was related to the Fry's of chocolate fame I think. She was instrumental in the reform of prisons - particularly how women were treated. She appeared on the reverse of £5 notes between 2002 to 2016.

  • @jameslewis2635
    @jameslewis2635 2 роки тому

    In the UK we don't generally carry larger cash denominations because we can use direct card payment in most shops or withdraw more cash without paying extra and with the larger values (such as the £50 one for example) there tend to be a lot of forgeries around. When you are familiar with how these look they are usually easy to spot but people handling cash in poor light can often be caught out (trust me, as a delivery driver I know this for a fact). This is made harder for the sales person that the Scottish version of our currency is still valid throughout the UK and is almost completely different in design meaning that forgeries of those notes in England and Wales are more likely to get past a casual inspection due to a lack of familiarity.

  • @andrewbuxton286
    @andrewbuxton286 2 роки тому +4

    the smaller english coins like 1p,2p 5p are also known as "shrapnel"

  • @stewartross1233
    @stewartross1233 2 роки тому +4

    Be careful with the new plastic notes especially when new as they can stick together and you can easily hand over multiple notes thinking it one.

  • @-yeme-
    @-yeme- 2 роки тому

    Turner (on the back of the 20) was an artist. The picture in the background is one his famous works, The Fighting Temeraire, showing an old wooden warship being towed away to be broken up. Coincidentally it also appears in the Bond film "Skyfall," when Bond meets Q in an art gallery to take delivery of his gun and radio, the two sit on a bench and briefly discuss the painting.

  • @Mirioman
    @Mirioman 2 роки тому +18

    Wow that's the first new £50 note I've ever seen. Not many people tend to carry them around. Last time I paid with an old one in a store all the staff gathered round to check it as they aren't often seen.

    • @flappetyflippers
      @flappetyflippers 2 роки тому

      Yeah some shops even refuse to take then (which they're not allowed to do I'm pretty sure)
      Personally I've never actually seen one in person

    • @damianhudson6399
      @damianhudson6399 2 роки тому

      Most shops are stopping to take them due to the fact as they're the easiest to forge and some other reasons

  • @elladurchdenwald8229
    @elladurchdenwald8229 2 роки тому +3

    We Germans prefer cash over cards or digital; debt is seen as shameful and we're very slow with new technology so often carry €100s in cash. The British are more comfortable with debt and technology, so card payments were more widely adopted, and later digital payments, so people rarely want more than £50 notes. My major complaint about UK currency is that their 1p, 2p, and even 5p, are more often useless for transactions, so begin to accumilate taking up space, and should be abolished.

    • @StreetsOfRage2
      @StreetsOfRage2 2 роки тому

      Yep, our small denomination coins are so frustrating. After a night out in the pub I'm often left with a heavy bulging wallet full of coins. 😩
      I just throw them in the bin 🤪😝

  • @GlyntTheCat
    @GlyntTheCat 2 роки тому

    Full disclosure, £50 note is legal tender but you'll be hard-pressed to get some shops to accept it.
    The highest we usually see is £20.
    Additionally, we have a £1 coin and £2 coin, the £1 coin was recently redesigned from a previously round coin to a multi edged coin and it also contains a holographic little patch that changes between £ and 1 depending on where you look at it.

  • @daveofyorkshire301
    @daveofyorkshire301 2 роки тому +7

    The one pound note was replaced in 1984 and ceased to be legal tender in 1988, since then a £1 coin and then later a £2 coin has entered circulation.
    Even though £50 notes are legal tender shops won't accept them, so always choose £5, £10, £20's... Plus just because it's legal tender they aren't forced to accept currency - only a bank is. That why some shops refuse Scottish currency too..

    • @reactions5783
      @reactions5783 2 роки тому

      Yeah, it's always annoying when you receive some Scottish currency at a shop or somewhere, and don't realise until later. It can take a while to eventually get rid of it at a shop that will accept it.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 роки тому

      @@reactions5783 Scottish notes are legal currency anywhere in the UK but Scottish and English notes are not legal tender in Scotland. As confirmed by the Bank of England website.

    • @allenwilliams1306
      @allenwilliams1306 2 роки тому +2

      Wrong: legal tender is that which, by law, has to be accepted in the settlement of debt. In a shop you usually are not given possession of the goods until you have paid, so no debt is actually created at any time. Shops can demand payment in whatever form they like. This is why shops could refuse cash during COVID. In a restaurant, on the other hand, you will pay when you have already taken possession, so they are obliged to accept legal tender cash. Moreover, whether in the settlement of debt or paying in advance before taking possession of goods, the law does not require that change be given: you have to tender the exact amount specified, or more, but the recipient is not obliged to give you change if you tender in excess of the total. They are doing you a favour by giving change. Scottish (and NI) notes are not legal tender (even in Scotland or Northern Ireland respectively), but they are valid, and may be accepted at the recipient's discretion.

    • @daveofyorkshire301
      @daveofyorkshire301 2 роки тому

      @@allenwilliams1306 In a normal transaction where does the debt come from? If you're paying by debt it does not require currency, it's debt.
      Trying paying your council tax or large bills with 1p coins, it's legal tender and they will refuse it.
      A shop trading goods can refuse to serve you, or refuse specific currency or forms of payment, they operate under their terms. There is no law forcing payment in coin of the realm. How do you think Bitcoin works? A shop can say they want to be paid in paperclips if they wanted too.

    • @Hiforest
      @Hiforest 2 роки тому

      I've not had any trouble spending Scottish notes in other parts of the UK for at least a decade. Same with bank of Ulster notes, the bank takes them all the same so businesses should.

  • @leedshunk
    @leedshunk 2 роки тому +7

    Great video ! Our currency notes change every few years , and always vary the historical figures which appear on the back. Since they went plastic they all reduced in size a fair amount and although I'm 56 years old I've never ever had a £50 note.
    I'm pretty sure the Bank of England dont issue high denomination notes to keep down counterfeiting 😘👍

    • @peterd788
      @peterd788 2 роки тому +3

      The supply of £50 notes is limited because they get taken out of circulation very quickly by criminals. When the Euro was launched US and UK authorities begged the Europeans not to release a 500 Euro note because of how easy it would be for criminals to move large sums of money.

    • @klepto5596
      @klepto5596 2 роки тому

      You’ve NEVER had a £50 note in 56 years !!! So you’ve never withdraw a large amount of cash from anywhere . I’m shocked , 50’s are so common here and I’m from the shithole called Slough.

    • @leedshunk
      @leedshunk 2 роки тому +1

      @@klepto5596 honestly , I never have , maybe it's a northern thing ! 🤔

    • @klepto5596
      @klepto5596 2 роки тому

      @@leedshunk Well you live and learn I guess.

  • @tersse
    @tersse 2 роки тому

    in the uk we stack our notes small to large, so its harder to give say a 10 as a five, if you mix up your notes all the same size, you could end up giving some one a 10 for a five and not notice very hard to do in the UK.

  • @davidwebley6186
    @davidwebley6186 2 роки тому +10

    Interesting to see our currency. I can't say I have seen a lot recently. At the start of the covid pandemic I withdrew £50 from the ATM and still have £10 of that left. I mostly pay via debit card or just use contactless payment with my card or mobile phone. A lot of businesses may not accept the £50 note as they are not widely used or seen so businesses have no experience to know whether they might be real or fake. Also there are some businesses now that only accept contactless payments rather than cash as this has reduced infection spread during the pandemic and also reduced their banking costs.
    Don't tell me some wealthy capitalist has the patent on US Dollar green ink. I can't believe how difficult it must be for the visually impaired in the US including many of the elderly.

    • @cowardsallaround98
      @cowardsallaround98 2 роки тому

      You are a bundle of fun mate
      No cash on your hip what a position to take

    • @ayeshausman3356
      @ayeshausman3356 2 роки тому

      @@zigzagtoes hello

    • @davecurrey6758
      @davecurrey6758 2 роки тому +1

      Cash is very important and should be encouraged to continue it's use moving to a cashless society will be very damaging

    • @ayeshausman3356
      @ayeshausman3356 2 роки тому

      @@davecurrey6758 good

    • @davecurrey6758
      @davecurrey6758 2 роки тому +1

      @@zigzagtoes what about someone who has gone overdrawn and decides to sell something to get to the end of the month, in a cashless society the money would just go in to the overdraft.
      With cash there's no middleman you pay a sum of money for a service or item and the transaction is done in a cashless society the banks will take a percentage for dealing with the same transaction, the rich get richer the poor get poorer

  • @tamus41
    @tamus41 2 роки тому +8

    When you get to Scotland, we have our own bank notes. They are also in £5, £10, £20 and £50 notes. Generally the English don't like to accept Scottish notes (silly Sassenachs, lol). Scottish establishments also tend to not accept £50 notes either, be it English money or Scottish money. Personally, I think the Scottish notes look better than the English ones. We also have 3 different banknotes. Royal Bank of Scottland, Bank of Scotland and Clydesdale Bank. Look them up and see what you think.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 роки тому

      The Scottish banks issue notes in denominations of £5, £10, £20, £50 and £100. Only the Royal Bank of Scotland continues to issue a small volume of £1 notes.

    • @noahswann
      @noahswann 2 роки тому +1

      don't forget those daft 100 peso notes that you lot have, I got my arse kicked at work for accepting one from a customer when paying a £2300 bill down here south of the wall!

    • @migsg7238
      @migsg7238 2 роки тому

      @@noahswann Why? It is UK government approved Legal Currency (not legal tender). NB no card payments or the like are legal currency or legal tender, but everyone seems to accept them. I remember a friend trying to spend a Bank of Scotland tenner in a pub in Birmingham (England not Alabama!) and being told they don't accept them, but they would accept his Bank Of Scotland Debit card payment. Turns out the pub actually banked with the Bank of Scotland as well, it said so on the card machine (before the Halifax merger). Crazy.

    • @reverendnumbnuts1857
      @reverendnumbnuts1857 2 роки тому +2

      @@migsg7238 Not really crazy, it's just easier as a lot of customers will not accept it in change. Quite a few cashiers and bar people are simply not used to seeing them and to avoid being passed a forgery will just refuse them.

    • @robertgriffith8857
      @robertgriffith8857 2 роки тому

      @@migsg7238 : I think you are confusing the term legal tender with what a business will accept as payment for a transaction (a sale). A bank card is not the same as a Bank note. A card merely authorises your bank (or other issuer) to make a payment out of your account to settle a debt. Nothing to do with legal tender etc.

  • @lotta5363
    @lotta5363 2 роки тому +1

    Just to let you know for when you're here in the UK, some shops/restaurants stopped taking cash since the pandemic and only accept card. Also £50s are actaully very uncommon, I don't think you can even get them at ATMs (I've never used one before), and some small shops won't accept them, mostly just supermarkets will. Also, we call it change too, our 50p is pretty common, and the 2 pence is not the same and 2 pound -pence is like cents and pounds are like dollars, so that 2 pence piece you have is more similar to 2 cent. We do have 1 and 2 pound coins and they're both pretty cool. And for if you go to Scotland, they have different cash there but you can use English money in Scotland and Scottish money in England:) Hope you love the UK! :)

  • @chrisellis3797
    @chrisellis3797 2 роки тому +5

    IMPORTANT: Credit/Debit cards use chip and pin or need your 4 digit code in the reader. UK no longer allows/uses signing your name.
    Travellers cheques or a prepaid card that you've put a load of Pounds on gives better security than ALL cash
    When taking cash spread it across cases/bags so if a bag gets lost you don't lose all your money.
    I do this for going to the US

    • @watfordjc
      @watfordjc 2 роки тому

      That depends entirely on what card the card issuer has issued, with most US banks opting for Chip & Signature EMV cards instead of Chip & PIN EMV cards. Stick a Chip & Signature card in a UK card reader, and it will tell the cashier to ask for a signature. If a shop refuses a disabled person's Chip & Signature card, they are likely committing an offence under the Equality Act.
      If a shop accepts VISA/MasterCard as a form of payment, it must accept ALL VISA/MasterCard cards.