News
THE Bank of England launched its new state-of-the-art £10 polymer note in late 2017. The old cotton paper notes have now expired and are no longer accepted as legal tender – here's what that ...
In the weeks after the launch of the Bank of England's new £10 ... as legal tender. Yes. A strange quirk of the British legal system means that in Scotland neither English nor Scottish notes ...
Old paper £10 notes will go out of circulation by the end of today, after which they will cease to be legal tender in shops. From Friday 2 March shops will no longer be required to accept the ...
The old £10 note goes out of circulation at the end of the day. These notes will cease to be legal tender — meaning shops are no longer obliged to take them — after 11.59 p.m. GMT on March 1.
BACK in September 2016 the new plastic five pound note was ... about the old paper note? Ad of May 5 2017, the traditional paper banknote is no longer counted as a legal tender.
In May 2017, Britain will no longer accept paper five pound notes as legal tender. They'll no longer be accepted at shops and banks. The Bank of England will introduce a new polymer 10 pound note ...
Existing 10 pound notes, which feature the scientist Charles Darwin, will cease to be legal tender during the first half of next year. Rolling out the new plastic notes has not been without its ...
But what about the old paper note? The Bank of England states that all notes are replaced periodically to help tackle counterfeiting and to keep up to date with new security features. £5, £10 ...
The 20 pound note is the third to be made of durable polymer material rather than paper, following the launch of new five pound and 10 pound notes ... and they will remain legal tender for now.
If you're arguing in a shop about whether they'll take a new Scottish £10 ... legal tender. Yes. A strange quirk of the British legal system means that in Scotland neither English nor Scottish ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results