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[£100 note] - You can spend it in Scotland shops, but what about England??
http://www.rampantscotland.com/graph...s100_newf2.jpg
If you had a Scottish Hundred Pound Note given to you, would you ever expect a shop to accept it in England? I imagine that in Scotland, the shops would take it NO PROBLEM??? "I'll just by that Crunchie bar for 55p please", "Can you change a £100 Scottish bank note???" ANSWER: ??????????? I'd say NO!!! or do you feel confident that shops would take it? Perhaps it should never have been printed? a £50 note is worrying to some people, as there are good forgeries going around |
Aren't businesses required to accept Scottish currency in England? (Not too sure about that). But I'd expect they wouldn't want you buying a Crunchie with it, haha.
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A Crunchie for 55p? What a rip off...
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As far as I know, English currency is accepted in Scotland but Scottish currency isn't accepted in England.
(This comes from a guy who is Scottish but now lives in England, and visits Scotland at least once a year :thumbs:) |
"Scottish currency isn't accepted in England." ??? At all, or is it up to the shops discretion?
Because I've spent loads of Scottish money in England? Edit: Maybe it's because I'm "Oop Norf" ? |
They're possibly a bit more lenient "Oop Norf". As a general rule, they don't accept it :laugh2:
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and if a shop gives u a scottish note they do not have to exchange it back as i found out when i kicked of because i wanted english money lol |
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well if your right i got arrest for a crime that doesnt excised
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You can spend Scottish money in England. However, I once bought something from a shop using one of the new English £20 notes and the tender refused it because they thought it was Scottish. I was like, "It's English but even if it wasn't, Scottish money is accepted" - stupid people. :rolleyes: I had to point out the "Bank of England" bit on the note for them to accept it.
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You can definitely spend Scottish money in England because I've done it.
I think it is at the shops discretion though. I highly doubt anybody would accept a £100 note wherever it came from because a lot of shops don't even accept £50 notes. |
I have had a Scottish £1 - £5 - £10 & £20 regularly through my hands and when you try to give it to someone else to purchase something, many turn their noses up at them? I can understand way, as when they are given Scottish notes, they know that they are going to face the same problem when trying to pass them on to someone else.
A Scottish £100 note, well, that is a risky decision!! I would be wary if someone wanted to buy something off me and I had to give £90 change or something? [The Crunchie was a joke, ha!] |
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A lot of shops(In England) do seem to kick up a stink when handed a Scottish note.I frequently travel to Scotland and N.Ireland and i purposley bring their notes back.:devil:
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Well spitfire, they can hardly refuse them over there, can they? But changing a Hundred pound note for a £5 purchase - perhaps wouldn't be welcomed? I know I would be bothered |
I didn't even know they existed, I don't think I've ever even seen a £50 note either lol.
I think the new £20 notes look horrid. |
If it says sterling on it, it is legal tender in England. Although how many tills carry enough float to cover £99.45 I would not be sure. Of course just because it is legal tender does not mean the shop has to accept it. As there is no legal obligation for a shop to sell to you.
On another legal note, should the picture of the not have "sample" printed on it? |
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Apparently - [legal or not] - The £100 Scottish bank note doesn't have sample on?? I guess that is just the way it goes. Copy it, print it, counterfeit it - but it won't matter - it won't be accepted! |
I'm pretty sure it's up to the discretion of the shop keeper, I vaguely remember being told that.
Quite why there's such an issue against the Scottish notes, though, I really wouldn't know. Surely it should be fine to use?! |
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Ok, I’m going to sound stupid here but I didn’t even know Scotland had its own money. I thought all of the UK use British Sterling? It’s all GBP aint it?
How does it work? Is it all British Sterling, just the different places print their own notes? Can you use them in each others places? Are all the coins the same or are there different ones too? Does this also mean that Wales and Northern Ireland have their own notes? |
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They all use our bank notes too, except Southern Ireland that is - [separate] also, there are coins as well - I have only had one once |
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Are the UK coins the same across the UK? I find the English coins strange - I guess it's co i'm use to the Euro, but your 1 pound coin always confuses me as I grew up in Australia and your 1 pound is a lot like the $2 coin in Oz. Come join us in the Euro, you know you want to. Hehehe |
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The Australian Dollar is worth less than the US Dollar. I bought something from Australia mail-order once. A book I was after and I was happy with the end-price, wayyyyyy Great!! I haven't seen the Australian AU$2 - but our pound is very useful - I just want a million of them pleeeeeease, ha! I know what you mean about the useful side when crossing over to European countries - sadly for us, we have to go to Travel agents and do it. They give good rates now - post offices aren't bad either - if you get the timing right? |
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