current Serbian Dinar banknotes
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Convert your leftover current Serbian Dinar banknotes to cash using our hassle-free online exchange service. Get paid fast for your unused currency from Serbia.
These banknotes were introduced in 2003 by the Belgrade-based National Bank of Serbia. They replaced Yugoslavian Dinar banknotes with the same design. The current Serbian Dinar banknotes have the word ‘Serbia’ [CPBNJE] printed on them, compared to the replaced Yugoslavian Dinara banknotes which have the word ‘Yugoslavia’ [JUGOSLAVIJE].
We exchange all Serbian banknotes with the word ‘CPPBNJE’ on them. If you have a banknote with the word ‘JUGOSLAVIJE’, then we can currently not exchange it, but we may in the near future.
In addition to current Serbian banknotes, we also exchange Serbian coins and old Serbian banknotes from World War II.
Do you have current Serbian Dinar 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 Serbian Dinara. Click on the Wallet symbol to complete checkout and get paid within 5 days of receiving your currencies.
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10 Serbian Dinara banknote
The 10 Serbian dinara banknote depicts the linguist Vuk Stefanović Karadžić. He published the first Serbian dictionary in 1818 after moderninsing the Serbian written language. The reverse side of this Serbian note shows lettering from the new standardised Serbian Cyrillic alphabet that Karadžić introduced. The people on this side of the banknote are members of … ContinuedYou get: £0.052501 RSD = £0.0052500000 -
20 Serbian Dinara banknote
The green coloured 20 dinara Serbian banknote features the 17th century philosopher and poet from Montenegro, Petar II Petrović-Njegoš. Njegoš is also shown on the reverse of the 20 RSD note, along with views of Lovćen national park where his mausoleum sits atop the mountain Jezerski vrh in Lovćen, the national park in southwestern Montenegro.You get: £0.105001 RSD = £0.0052500000 -
50 Serbian Dinara banknote
This violet coloured 50 dinara banknote from the former Yugoslavian country of Serbia has a portrait of the composer and musicologist known as the father of Serbian music, Stevan Stojanović. The back of note shows him standing, and also shows an illustration from the Miroslav Gospel, a 12th century religious decorative manuscript.You get: £0.262501 RSD = £0.0052500000 -
100 Serbian Dinara banknote
The blue 100 Serbian dinara banknote features the famous and mysterious Serbian inventor and engineer Nikola Tesla. Hailed by some as one the greatest inventions of all time, Tesla’s alternating current induction motor is depicted on the reverse of the 100 RSD note. The American electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla is named after this Serbian inventor.You get: £0.525001 RSD = £0.0052500000 -
200 Serbian Dinara banknote
This 200 dinara note has the Serbian impressionist painter Nadežda Petrović on both sides. Petrović was a volunteer nurse during the Balkan Wars and then the First World War, during which she contracted typhus and cholera, resulting in her death at the age of 41 in 1915. The reverse side of this 200 RSD banknote … ContinuedYou get: £1.050001 RSD = £0.0052500000 -
500 Serbian Dinara banknote
The 500 Serbian dinara banknote has the portrait of Yugoslavian painter Jovan Cvijić on the front. Although he started out studying landscapes, Cvijić’s most significant contributions were in the fields of human geography and sociology. The back of the RSD 500 note also shows Cvijić, and has stylised ethnographic motifs that may be indicative of … ContinuedYou get: £2.625001 RSD = £0.0052500000 -
1000 Serbian Dinara banknote
This 1000 Serbian dianara banknote features Đorđe Vajfert, an industrialist and philanthropist who became Governor of the National Bank of Serbia in 1890. The back of the note again depicts Vajfert, as well as showing the decorative arches of the interior of the National Bank of Serbia building in Belgrade.You get: £5.250001 RSD = £0.0052500000 -
2000 Serbian Dinara banknote
On the 2000 dinara banknote from Serbia, there is a portrait of Milutin Milanković, a Serbian polymath born in 1879. Milanković made significant contributions in the areas of climatology and astronomy. What are now known as Milankovitch cycles help to explain the occurrence of geological ice ages, and they predict future climate change.You get: £10.500001 RSD = £0.0052500000 -
5000 Serbian Dinara banknote
The 5000 Serbian dinara banknote depicts Slobodan Jovanović, the Serbian lawyer, politician and historian. He was Prime Minister of the Yugoslav government in exile in London between 1942 and 1943, where he continued to live until his death in 1958, having been sentenced in absentia to 20 years in prison by the Communist Authorities that … ContinuedYou get: £26.250001 RSD = £0.0052500000