yenom wrote: » I think the ECB stopped printing them?
secman wrote: » I once sold a car for €4,500 back in 2003, the guy was in Insurance and his wife a doctor, they paid me with 9 €500 notes, very weird at the time. Had to change one of them in a rural pub one night, gas episode all together
DukeCaboom wrote: » I remember here there used to be a lad go to local gaa matches a try to pay at the gate with a €500 note, tell them he'd nothing smaller and they'd usually let him in for free.
rob316 wrote: » €500? You'd barely see a €100 note these days
L1011 wrote: » Can barely shift one either. Got a 200 once and Tesco eventually took it after getting a manager down to decide - should have lodged it. Only 500 I've seen in the flesh was a fake, warned the place that took it that it was a fake and all - someone 'paid' for a 50 quid doctors visit it with and got 450 in real money in change.
No problem " passing" £50s in London or anywhere in the UK.Anyone on here got £50's to get "rid" of I'll take them and give you £40 or £35 change.We can negotiate my fee.Cornershops take them,bars take them,supermarkets take them.An Post wouldn't do much foreign exchange business if people refused to take £50's for their hard earned Euros
The EU began withdrawing e500 a long time when they realised the criminal fraternity worldwide loved them.Very few ever made it into general circulation.A suitcase of e500 is a lot easier to carry than the same value in US $.The Shelbourne or 4Seasons in Dublin might have one or two in the till
£50s are quite uncommon in the UK though. Yes places will take them but often people were very nervous handling them and would clear it with a manager. Places I worked would never ever have 20s in the till at the start of the day and not many 10s so a few 50s became a problem pretty quick on the rare occasion it happened
I'm pretty sure lap dancing joints and casinos in London take them. A fella told me that.
Londoner born and bred here. I repeat - you can't pass a £50 note anywhere here. Not without a great deal of hassle! Most shops won't take them. Marks & Spencer will, but only if you call a manager or a supervisor to verify the note (Personal experience as I used to work for them). Not worth the agg, so I refuse the £50's if offered to me here. Come to that, I don't bother getting sterling here as the rates are crap, so usually just draw from my sterling account if I need cash when home.
Even Scottish banknotes induce panic in London, even though they're legal tender south of the border!😉
No they’re not. They’re not even legal tender in Scotland. Bank of England notes are the only legal tender in the UK.
Those Scottish and NI notes are considered to be legal “currency”. They do not have to be accepted by anyone in the UK in settlement of a debt.
Those Scottish and NI notes are simply pegged to the Sterling and the banks who issue them make a commitment to the holder of exchanging them for real Bank of England notes. If I lived in England I wouldn’t accept them either.
No where does it say you need to have an account for a debt to occur. I’m happy to be proven wrong if you can show me something in Irish legislation or case law which says otherwise.
Let’s take the case where you go for a meal. If you try to pay with a €500 note it’s too late for them to refuse your custom. You don’t have an account with the restaurant either.
Not sure what you mean in your last paragraph either.
Actually, it turns out that Bank of England notes aren't legal tender in Scotland, either - only coins are legal tender.