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The new $5 note includes the tactile feature and was issued on 1 September 2016, to coincide with Australia's National Wattle Day, [18] followed by the new $10 banknote on 20 September 2017. [19] The new $50 note was released for circulation on 18 October 2018, [ 20 ] followed by the new $20 note on 9 October 2019, [ 21 ] and the new $100 was ...
The Australian one-hundred-dollar note was first issued in 1984 as a paper note. [2] There have been two different issues of this denomination: initially a very light turquoise-blue paper note, and from May 1996, a green polymer note. [3] Since the start of issue there have been six signature combinations. Two other combinations were not issued.
File:Australian $50 note paper front.jpg; File:Australian $50 note polymer back.jpg; File:Australian $50 polymer front.jpg; File:Australian $100 polymer front.jpg; File:Australian 20 dollar note RBA Reverse Fourth Series.jpeg; File:Australian 20 dollar note Reverse Fourth Series.jpeg; File:Australian 100 dollar note Obverse Fourth Series.jpeg
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Banknotes of the Australian dollar in a wallet. In 1988, Australia was the first country to introduce ...
The Australian fifty-dollar note is an Australian banknote with a face value of fifty Australian dollars ($50). Since 1995 it has been a polymer banknote featuring portraits of Edith Cowan, first female member of an Australian parliament, and inventor and Australia's first published Aboriginal Australian author, David Unaipon. The $50 banknote ...
The two dollar note was replaced by a gold-coloured coin on 14 June 1988 (Monday), due to the longer service life and cost effectiveness of coins. These notes can still be redeemed at face value by the Reserve Bank of Australia and most commercial banks, [ 1 ] but numismatics and note collectors may pay a higher price for these notes depending ...
A newer £1,000 note (1923–1928) with the profile of George V was also prepared but never issued. [24] A punch-cancelled specimen note was discovered in London in 1996 and subsequently sold for a sum in excess of $200,000. Nonetheless, this note is not recognised as a legitimate Australian banknote issue.
The Australian one-pound note was the most prevalent banknote in circulation with the pound series, with the last series of 1953–66 having 1,066 million banknotes printed. [2] The first banknotes issued were superscribed notes purchased from 15 banks across Australia and printed with Australian Note and were payable in gold.