Chinese Yuan withdrawn Renminbi banknotes
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Convert your leftover Chinese Yuan withdrawn Renminbi banknotes to cash using our hassle-free online exchange service. Get paid fast for your unused currency from China.
These Chinese Yuan Renminbi banknotes have been discontinued and are no longer in use as a valid means of payment in the People’s Republic of China. We continue to exchange these withdrawn Chinese Yuan Renminbi banknotes. We also exchange current Chinese Yuan banknotes, Chinese Yuan coins and Bank of China foreign exchange certificates.
Do you have Chinese Yuan withdrawn Renminbi banknotes like the ones in the pictures below? Add the amount you want to exchange to your Wallet. You'll see exactly how much money you'll get for your Chinese Yuan. Click on the Wallet symbol to complete checkout and get paid within 5 days of receiving your currencies.
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100 Chinese Yuan banknote (China Founding Fathers)
The old style 100 Chinese Yuan banknote features four of China’s Founding Fathers on the front side. The back side of the old ¥100 Yibai Yuan note shows peaks of the Jinggang Mountains.You get: £6.819001 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
50 Chinese Yuan banknote (Hukou Waterfall)
This withdrawn banknote of 50 Chinese Yuan features three workers on the front side: a white collar worker, farm girl and male industrial worker. On the back side of the old ¥50 Wu Shi Yuan bill is an image of the Hukou Waterfall on the Yellow River in China.You get: £3.409501 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
10 Chinese Yuan banknote (Mount Everest)
The discontinued bill of ¥10 Shi Yuan has two people on the front side: an elder Han with moustache and young Mongolian man. The reverse side has an image of the snowy peak of Mount Everest in the Himalayas.You get: £0.681901 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
5 Chinese Yuan banknote (Yangtze River)
This 5 Yuan banknote from China has the image of two people on the front side: an old Tibetan man and a young Hui woman. The back side of the ¥5 Wu Yuan banknote shows the Wu Gorge, one of the Three Gorges of the Yangtze River in People’s Republic of China.You get: £0.340951 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
2 Chinese Yuan banknote (Southern Heaven Rock)
On the obverse side of this ¥2 Er Yuan banknote from China are two young women from Uygur and Yi. The reverse side of the 2 RMB note shows an image of Southern Heaven Rock, a boulder near the Rock of Sun and Moon in Tianya Haijiao, with a famous poem inscribed on its top.You get: £0.136381 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
1 Chinese Yuan banknote (Great Wall of China)
This ¥1 Yi Yuan banknote shows two young women (from Dong and Yao) on the front side. The famous Great Wall of China is featured on the backside of this old 1 Yuan Renminbi bill.You get: £0.068191 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
5 Wu Jiao banknote China
The banknote of 5 Wu Jiao is the equivalent of 0.5 Chinese Yuan. The Jiao is a subunit of the Chinese Renminbi. 10 Jiao is the equivalent of 1 Yuan. This purple coloured 5 Jiao banknote features Miao and Zhuang children and the National Emblem of the People’s Republic of China.You get: £0.034101 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
2 Er Jiao banknote China
The 2 Er Jiao bill is the equivalent of 0.2 Chinese Yuan. The Jiao is a subunit of the Chinese Renminbi. Ten Jiao is the equivalent of one Yuan. This green coloured 2 Jiao banknote features Pu Yi and Korean young women, and the National Emblem of the People’s Republic of China.You get: £0.013641 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
1 Yi Jiao banknote China
This note of 1 Yi Jiao is the equivalent of 1/10 Chinese Yuan. The Jiao is a subunit of the Yuan. This brown coloured 1 Jiao banknote features two Chinese men and the National Coat of Arms of the People’s Republic of China.You get: £0.006821 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
10 Chinese Yuan banknote (1965 issue)
The ¥10 Shi Yuan banknote from 1965 shows workers on the front side and the Great Hall of the People on Tiananmen Square, Beijing, on the back side.You get: £0.681901 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
5 Chinese Yuan banknote (1960 issue)
The 1960 version of the ¥5 Wu Yuan banknote shows a foundry worker on the front side. On the back side of the brown coloured 5 Yuan banknote is an image of a stone quarry with a train and stylized trees.You get: £0.340951 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
2 Chinese Yuan banknote (1960 issue)
This banknote of ¥2 Er Yüan features a male factory worker. The green coloured 2 Yuan banknote is dated 1960 and features an oil field and the Chinese National Emblem.You get: £0.136381 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
1 Chinese Yuan banknote (1960 issue)
The 1 Yi Yuan banknote from 1960 features a young woman, Liang Jun, driving a tractor. Lian Jun was in fact China’s first female tractor driver! On the back of the red coloured one Yuan banknote is a flock of sheep and a shepherd.You get: £0.068191 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
5 Wu Jiao banknote China (1972 issue)
The 5 Wu Jiao banknote from 1972 features women working in a textile factory. The banknote’s value is the equivalent of 0.5 Yuan, with a Jiao being 1/10th of a Yuan.You get: £0.034101 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
2 Er Jiao banknote China (1962 issue)
The 2 Er Jiao banknote from 1962 features a bridge over the Yangtze River in China. The banknote’s value is the equivalent of 0.2 Yuan, with a Jiao being 1/10th of a Yuan.You get: £0.013641 CNY = £0.0681900000 -
1 Yi Jiao banknote China (1962 issue)
The 1 Yi Jiao banknote from 1962 features workers marching with tools. The banknote’s value is the equivalent of 0.1 Yuan, with a Jiao being 1/10th of a Yuan.You get: £0.006821 CNY = £0.0681900000