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What is the currency in Denmark now? What is the currency in Denmark? Money of Denmark. Cross-currency rates from the Central Bank of the Russian Federation

Do you want to know the rate of the Danish krone of the Central Bank of the Russian Federation because you are sending money to this country, going on a trip or planning to make purchases abroad? The information presented on the site will be useful in such situations, and you will be able to obtain up-to-date and accurate information.

Dynamics of the Danish krone exchange rate of the Central Bank

Foreign currency quotes are constantly changing - this is monitored by the Central Bank, which, in addition, sets values ​​for every day. Prepared on this page:

  • Danish krone exchange rate of the Central Bank of the Russian Federation for today and tomorrow;
  • archived values ​​for yesterday and other days;
  • visual chart for a month, six months, a year;
  • forecast values ​​for future periods;
  • calculations with changes compared to the previous day;
  • information about banks where currency is purchased and sold.

Information is updated daily and even on weekends to ensure you only receive verified and accurate quotes online.

How to convert Danish krone to rubles?

You no longer have to make complex calculations - a convenient Danish krone to ruble converter will help with this, performing the exchange in a couple of clicks. Just indicate the amount you want to transfer, and the program will calculate the result - in rubles and dollars.

You need to use a converter in order to make the most profitable deal without cheating, since you will know in advance the amount to be received. In addition, thanks to analytical information, it will be easy to predict fluctuations in the future and choose the most optimal day for transferring funds.

The krone is the currency of Denmark, including the autonomous province of Greenland and the Faroe Islands. The crown is divided into 100 ore (singular and plural are the same). ISO 4217 code - DKK; The Danish abbreviation is "kr". Variants DKR or Dkr are sometimes used, but these are not official.

Story

Until the end of the 18th century, the crown had a par value of 8 marks. The new krone appeared in Denmark in 1873. She replaced the Danish rickstaler. Two crowns made one rikstaler. The krona emerged as a result of the formation of the Scandinavian Monetary Union, which survived until the First World War. The original members of the monetary union were Sweden and Denmark, followed by Norway two years later. The crown was backed by gold: 2,480 crowns equaled 1 kg of pure gold.

In Denmark and Norway the currency was called "krone" (see "Norwegian krone"), and in Sweden it was called "krona" (both of these words translate as "crown"). After the collapse of the monetary union, Denmark, Norway and Sweden decided not to change the name of their currency.

The Scandinavian Monetary Union collapsed in 1914 when the gold standard was abolished. Denmark returned to the gold standard in 1924, but abandoned it again in 1931. In 1940-45, the krone was pegged to the German Reismark. After the end of the German occupation, 24 kroner was equal to 1 English pound, but in August of that year this ratio dropped to 19.34 (4.8 kroner = 1 US dollar). Under the Bretton Woods system, Denmark devalued its currency in 1949. 6.91 crowns equaled one dollar. Further devaluation in 1967 resulted in a ratio of 7.5 kroner/dollar, 18 kroner/pound.

Faroe Islands and Greenland

Danish coins are in circulation in the Faroe Islands, but they have their own banknotes (see “Faroe krone”). During the British occupation of World War II, there was a shortage of small coins, which prompted Britain to mint copies of the Danish 1, 2, 5, 10 and 25 öre coins specifically for the Faroe Islands. The first three denominations were minted from bronze, the last two from an alloy of copper and nickel. These coins were similar to pre-war Danish ones, but they had the year 1942 on them and were missing a small heart - a sign of affiliation with the Royal Danish Mint in Copenhagen. Denmark did not mint similar coins this year because the country switched to zinc. Banknotes were printed by the local administration and were not circulated outside the Faroe Islands.

Modern Faroese banknotes appeared in the 1950s. Contrary to popular belief, the Faroese kroner is not an independent currency - it is a specially designed Danish kroner.

In Greenland, the colonial administration printed separate banknotes from 1803-1968 and coins from 1926-1964 (see "Greenland rickstaler" and "Greenland krone"). In 2006, the Danish government and the Greenland Autonomous Authority announced that there would be separate Greenlandic banknotes by 2008. They, like the Faroese ones, will receive the status of variations of Danish kroner.

Because of this status, Danish banknotes are circulated in Greenland and the Faroe Islands and are exchanged for local ones at a 1:1 ratio.

Attitude towards the euro

Denmark did not accept the Maastricht Convention, allowing the country to keep its currency when most of the EU adopted the euro in 1999. As a result of a referendum held in 2000, the country refused to accept the euro. The Liberal-Conservative government of Anders Fogh Rasmussen planned to hold another referendum in 2004, but the plan was not carried out because polls did not show support for the euro. The government still wants to introduce the euro in Denmark.

The crown/euro ratio is maintained by the European exchange rate mechanism. Before the advent of the euro, the kroner was linked to the German mark, which should have made it stable.

According to Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Denmark will switch to the euro in 2008.

Coins

The coins are issued by the National Bank of Denmark. When the krona was introduced in the 1870s, coins were minted for 1, 2, 5, 10 and 25 öre and for 1, 2, 10 and 20 kroner. The 1, 2 and 5 era coins were bronze, the 10, 25 era and 1 and 2 crown coins were silver, and the 10 and 20 crown coins were gold. Gold coins ceased being minted in 1917, and silver coins in 1919. Iron replaced bronze in 1918 and 1919. In 1920, 10- and 25-er coins made of copper-nickel alloy appeared, and in 1924, 1 and 2-crown coins made of 1:1 aluminum and bronze alloy appeared.

In 1941, zinc coins of 1, 10 and 25 öre and aluminum coins of 2 and 5 öre appeared. A year later, zinc coins of the 2nd and 5th era began to be minted. They abandoned the 50-öre and 2-crown coins. In 1946, 10 and 25 öre coins made of an alloy of copper and nickel appeared again, and a year later - 2 crown coins made of aluminum and bronze. In 1960, the 5-krona coin appeared and the 2-krona coins disappeared. In 1963, coins of 1 and 2 eras were abandoned, and in 1979 coins of 10 crowns appeared. In 1986, they stopped minting coins for the 5th and 10th era. They ceased to exist. In 1989-1992, coins of 50 öre, 2 and 20 crowns appeared, so the following coins are now in circulation:

The 25-era coin will cease production on October 1, 2008. This decision was made due to the high cost of production and the decrease in purchasing power of the coin. It can be exchanged at a national bank for an indefinite period of time.

50 era
1 crown
2 crowns
5 crowns
10 crowns
20 CZK

Banknotes

In 1875, the National Bank introduced banknotes of 10, 50, 100 and 500 crowns, and in 1898 - 5 crowns. Since 1891, banknotes have been issued by several private banks, including Aalborg Kreditbank, Aarhus Kreditbank, Dansk Købmandsbank, Esbjerg Kreditbank, Fredrikshavn Kreditbank, Hjørring Kreditbank, Odense Kreditbank, Randers Kreditbank, Thisted Kreditbank, Varde Kreditbank and Vejle Kreditbank. Denominations - 10 and 25 ore, 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 25 and 50 crowns.

In 1914, in connection with the outbreak of the First World War, 1-krona banknotes appeared, which were printed until 1921. In 1945, the Allied Command issued banknotes for 25 öre, 1, 5, 10, 50 and 100 kroner.

In 1960, 5-krona notes were replaced by coins. The new denomination banknotes did not appear until 1972, when 1000 kroner banknotes began to be printed. In 1979, the 10-krona notes were replaced by coins and 20-krona notes appeared, although these too have since been replaced by coins (notes of both denominations are still in circulation).

According to the Central Bank of the Russian Federation as of March 17, 2020, the price for 1 Danish krone (DKK) is 11.118 Russian ruble(RUB). Compared to the previous working day, the change was +0,1627 Russian ruble. To view the archive of the Danish krone exchange rate, click on the “Today” link and select the desired date using the calendar.

This chart will help you quickly receive information about quotes of the Danish krone against the ruble on the Forex market in real time. The user is given the opportunity to customize the terminal according to his preferences, choosing the style of bars and customizing indicators. Updated online, real-time DKK/RUB currency quotes reflect forex trading.

date Central Bank rate Change Percent
Today, Tue 1 DKK = 11.12 RUB +0,16 RUB +1,49 %
March 14, Sat 1 DKK = 10.96 RUB -0,21 RUB -1,87 %
March 13, Fri 1 DKK = 11.16 RUB +0,33 RUB +3,07 %
March 12, Thu 1 DKK = 10.83 RUB -0,15 RUB -1,36 %
March 11, Wed 1 DKK = 10.98 RUB +0,81 RUB +7,96 %
March 7, Sat 1 DKK = 10.17 RUB +0,32 RUB +3,23 %
March 6, Fri 1 DKK = 9.85 RUB -0,03 RUB -0,30 %
March 5, Thu 1 DKK = 9.88 RUB -0,01 RUB -0,10 %
March 4, Wed 1 DKK = 9.89 RUB +0,05 RUB +0,52 %
March 3, Tue 1 DKK = 9.84 RUB -0,04 RUB -0,44 %
February 29, Sat 1 DKK = 9.88 RUB +0,28 RUB +2,90 %
February 28, Fri 1 DKK = 9.61 RUB +0,06 RUB +0,65 %
27 February, Thu 1 DKK = 9.54 RUB +0,10 RUB +1,08 %
February 26, Wed 1 DKK = 9.44 RUB +0,14 RUB +1,50 %

Dynamics of the official exchange rate of the Danish krone to the ruble according to the Central Bank of Russia

The graph shows the dynamics of changes in the value of 1 Danish krone (DKK) against the ruble (RUB). Using quick links or the horizontal ruler under the graph, you can select any time period that interests you.

For the period you selected, the minimum price for 1 Danish Krone was ($ min|number:4 $) Russian ruble. It was ($min|date:"d MMMM yyyy"$) years. The maximum price for 1 Danish krone was fixed ($max|date:"d MMMM yyyy"$) of the year and was equal to ($max|number:4$) Russian ruble

Cross-currency rates from the Central Bank of the Russian Federation

Cross exchange rates are prepared based on the official exchange rate of the Russian ruble to foreign currencies, established by the Central Bank of the Russian Federation as of March 17, 2020.

Currency Cross course
Ruble to Danish krone 1 RUB = 0.0913 DKK
Danish krone to Australian dollar 1 DKK = 0.2378 AUD
Danish krone to Azerbaijani manat 1 DKK = 0.256 AZN
Danish krone to Armenian dram 1 DKK = 72.4979 AMD
Danish krone to Belarusian ruble 1 DKK = 0.35 BYN
Danish Krone to Bulgarian Lev 1 DKK = 0.2617 BGN
Danish krone to Brazilian real 1 DKK = 0.7172 BRL
Danish Krone to Hungarian Forint 1 DKK = 45.2721 HUF
Danish Krone to Korean Won 1 DKK = 182.4248 KRW
Danish krone to Hong Kong dollar 1 DKK = 1.1624 HKD
Danish krone to dollar 1 DKK = 0.1497 USD
Danish krone to euro 1 DKK = 0.1338 EUR
Danish krone to Indian rupee 1 DKK = 11.0742 INR
Danish krone to Kazakh tenge 1 DKK = 60.8445 KZT
Danish krone to Canadian dollar 1 DKK = 0.2071 CAD
Danish krone to Kyrgyzstani som 1 DKK = 10.9097 KGS
Danish krone to Chinese yuan 1 DKK = 1.0468 CNY
Danish krone to Moldovan leu 1 DKK = 2.639 MDL
Danish krone to Turkmen manat 1 DKK = 0.5232 TMT
Danish Krone to Norwegian Krone 1 DKK = 1,507 NOK
Danish Krone to Polish Zloty 1 DKK = 0.5843 PLN
Danish Krone to Romanian Leu 1 DKK = 0.6449 RON
Danish Krone to SDR (Special Drawing Rights) 1 DKK = 0.108 XDR
Danish krone to Singapore dollar 1 DKK = 0.2108 SGD
Danish krone to Tajikistani somoni 1 DKK = 1.4512 TJS
Danish Krone to Turkish Lira 1 DKK = 0.9422 TRY
Danish krone to Uzbek sum 1 DKK = 1426.0647 UZS
Danish krone to hryvnia 1 DKK = 3.9063 UAH
Danish krone to pound sterling 1 DKK = 0.1187 GBP
Danish Krone to Czech Koruna 1 DKK = 3.4926 CZK
Danish Krone to Swedish Krona 1 DKK = 1.4594 SEK
Danish krone to Swiss franc 1 DKK = 0.1416 CHF
Danish Krone to South African Rand 1 DKK = 2.4432 ZAR
Danish krone to Japanese yen 1 DKK = 15.8705 JPY

Danish krone information

The Danish krone is the official currency of the Kingdom of Denmark. This currency is also in circulation in the Faroe Islands and Greenland. Bank code - DKK. There are 100 öre in 1 crown. Current banknotes: 50, 100, 200, 500 and 1,000 kroner. Coins - 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 crowns and 50 ore. Since October 1, 2008, coins in the 25th era were withdrawn from circulation; after October 2011, banks do not exchange them.

On the front side of Danish banknotes there are bridges, on the reverse side there are archaeological sites and finds. On the obverse of the 50 Ore coin there is a crown and the word “Denmark”, on the reverse there is a denomination. The 1, 2 and 5 crown coins differ only in size: there is a round hole in the center of the coins, a royal monogram on the obverse, and an ornament and denomination on the reverse. The 10 and 20 crown coins are decorated with the image of the queen and the state coat of arms.

Historical reference

Historians believe that banknotes originated in Denmark at the beginning of the 11th century. These were silver coins minted at the court of King Canute. Since then, coins have always depicted a portrait or monogram of the monarch.

For many centuries, the main money in Denmark was the rigstaler; the krona appeared in 1875. According to the rigid gold standard, one kilogram of gold was equivalent to 2,480 crowns. Denmark, along with Sweden and Norway, was a member of the Scandinavian Monetary Union, which existed until the outbreak of the World War in 1914. After the collapse of the union, the countries acquired their own currencies, but in 1924 Denmark decided to return to the gold standard, which was maintained until 1933.

During the fascist occupation of 1940-1945. the crown was tied to the Reichsmark. When the Second World War ended, a new benchmark was chosen - the pound sterling. The initial exchange rate of the crown against the British pound was 24.1, but very soon the crown was already worth 19.3 per pound ($4.8). The Danish krone was devalued twice: in 1949 to $6.9 and in 1967 to $7.5.

In 2000, following a referendum, Denmark refused to join the euro currency area. More than half of the Danes voted against entry, amid a fairly high turnout at the polls. But since Germany remains Denmark's main trading partner, the country is highly dependent on euro fluctuations. The European crisis of 2011 slightly reduced the exchange rate of the crown to world currencies. In mid-November 2014, for one crown they give - $0.16, €0.13 or 7.9 rubles.

Faroese krona

The Faroe Islands are part of the Kingdom of Denmark and print their own money, at a rate of 1:1 to the Danish krone. Danish banks exchange Faroese kroner without commission. Formally, in the Faroe Islands, Danish kroner should not be accepted for payments, but in reality the rule is not observed. But in Denmark, Faroese money is almost unknown and it is quite difficult to pay with it.

Crowns in Greenland

Greenlandic kroner did not remain in regional status even in its best years, and since 1968 this currency has gone out of circulation on the island. Outside of Greenland, this money almost never appeared, even as a souvenir. The Danish government had planned to revive the crown in 2011, but Greenlandic leaders decided to postpone the event. Legally, Greenland, which is larger than Denmark, belongs to it. Officially, the Greenlandic krone served as currency from 1874 to 1967. There was also some very exclusive money in Greenland, for example, one of the mining companies printed its own currency for internal corporate payments, and this went on for quite a long time.

Economy of Denmark

Denmark is a country with an industrial-agrarian economy and a high level of development. More than 40% of the national income comes from industry, and in terms of foreign trade turnover per capita it is ahead of the rest of the European countries.

The leading industries in Denmark are: metalworking, machine and shipbuilding, production of electrical and electronic equipment, textile, food, and chemical industries. The agricultural sector is dominated by meat and dairy farming. Denmark has few mineral resources, so the country is very dependent on external markets. At the same time, Denmark is completely independent in terms of energy resources; an oil deposit has been discovered on the shelf of the North Sea.

The country's economy is undergoing changes. If 20 years ago there were 200,000 farms in Denmark, now there are only 70,000, although there are almost no small farms left. Also, thanks to the increased competence of specialists, the number of people employed in agriculture has decreased - from 20% to 6%. Denmark has a well-developed fishing industry, and numerous seaports accept ships on its coasts.

The standard of living in Denmark is one of the highest in the world, and the Danish krone is convertible and easily traded on Forex. But at the same time, this currency is directly dependent on the euro due to very close economic ties. You can import and export currency from the country without restrictions, but when exporting cash in excess of CZK 50,000, you must fill out a declaration indicating the origin of the funds. This is how Danish authorities fight money laundering.

How much will

For convenience, a quick “calculator” is provided to help you understand which banknote costs how much. The information is current as of March 17, 2020 according to the Central Bank.

Currency Conversion
5 DKK RUB 55.59
10 DKK RUB 111.18
25 DKK RUB 277.95
50 DKK 555.9 RUB
100 DKK 1111.8 RUB
250 DKK 2779.5 RUB
500 DKK 5559.0 RUB
1000 DKK RUB 11,118.0
2500 DKK RUB 27,795.0
5000 DKK RUB 55,590.0
10,000 DKK RUB 111,180.0
25,000 DKK RUB 277,950.0
50,000 DKK RUB 555,900.0
100,000 DKK RUB 1,111,800.0

Since the Kingdom of Denmark, even being a member of the EU, is not part of the Eurozone, it has its own national currency - the Danish krone. There were attempts to introduce the euro, but the majority of the population voted against such a decision in a referendum held in 2000.

One Danish krone (its international letter code is DKK, its numeric code is 208) includes 100 øre. In circulation there are coins in denominations of 50 øre, 1, 2, 5, 10 and 20 kroner and banknotes in denominations of 50, 100, 200, 500 and 1000 Danish kroner.

To exchange money, you can contact banks, post offices or specialized exchange offices. In the capital, 24-hour machines operate for these purposes. Some hotels also offer their services, but the rates there are extremely unfavorable. You can find the best offers at FOREX points or post offices.

Danish krone to ruble exchange rate

The country's banks are open on weekdays from 9.30 to 16.00 (on Thursday - until 18.00). Saturday and Sunday are days off. Exchange offices are open daily, seven days a week, until 10 p.m. Banks at airports and train stations work according to their staffing schedules (usually longer than other banks).

Almost all hotels, shops, cafes and restaurants accept credit cards. There will be no problems finding an ATM. Despite Denmark's long history, its currency is one of the most ageless currencies in Europe: this year the Danish krone will celebrate its 140th birthday.

The first money appeared in the Viking Age and consisted of small pieces of silver, but most often foreign coins were used - won during numerous raids and robberies. The local currency became dominant only in 1070.

Shillings appeared, then rigsdalers, rigsbank dalers, rigsdalers came back into use again, and only in 1873 kroons appeared. Modern Danish crowns not only rate goods and services, but also introduce landmarks and prominent figures of the Kingdom.

In addition to the Danish krone, in the Faroe Islands (an autonomous region of the Kingdom), the Faroese krone is in circulation - exclusively banknotes. The Greenland crown was planned to be introduced into use in Greenland, but the attempt was unsuccessful.