Compare the best New Zealand dollar buyback rates and exchange New Zealand dollars to pounds
You receive £127.20 | Buyback rate 2.2297 | Estimated postage £7.35 | Sell Now | |
Currency Online Group ❯ | ||||
You receive £127.06 | Buyback rate 2.232 | Estimated postage £7.35 | Sell Now | |
The Currency Club ❯ | ||||
You receive £127.06 | Buyback rate 2.232 | Estimated postage £7.35 | Sell Now | |
Sterling ❯ | ||||
You receive £126.65 | Buyback rate 2.2388 | Estimated postage £7.35 | Sell Now | |
Travel FX ❯ | ||||
You receive £123.08 | Buyback rate 2.3 | Estimated postage £7.35 | Sell Now | |
ACE-FX ❯ | ||||
You receive £120.13 | Buyback rate 2.3533 | Estimated postage £7.35 | Sell Now | |
Covent Garden FX ❯ | ||||
You receive £116.12 | Buyback rate 2.4298 | Estimated postage £7.35 | Sell Now | |
Manor FX ❯ |
It's easy to sell your leftover New Zealand dollars online. Use our New Zealand dollar buyback comparisons to find the best deal, then follow the link to the buyer's website to place your order online and lock-in your buyback rate. You'll need to decide whether to post your New Zealand dollars to the buyer, or try searching for a store near you so you can exchange your New Zealand dollars in person.
Securely package your New Zealand dollars and post it to the buyer using Royal Mail Special Delivery which is fully tracked and insured. Once the buyer has received your package they'll pay you by bank transfer within one working day.
Use our store finder to search for your nearest currency exchange, then simply take your New Zealand dollars to the store to sell over the counter. You'll save on postage fees, but availability varies by location and you'll have fewer deals to choose from compared to selling by post.
Currency Online Group are offering the best New Zealand dollar buyback rate right now at 2.2297. At this rate, 1 New Zealand dollar is worth £0.45. You'll need to place your order online to get this rate which is based on a comparison of 7 foreign exchange companies and assumes you were selling 300 New Zealand dollars by post.
It can be difficult to exchange leftover New Zealand dollar coins. Banks and foreign exchange companies don't generally accept coins because they're expensive to process and transport, so your options for exchanging any leftover shrapnel back into pounds can be limited:
Over the past 30 days, the New Zealand dollar buyback rate has risen 0.06% from 2.2297 on 25 Nov to 2.231 today. This means New Zealand dollars can be exchanged for more pounds today compared to a month ago. Right now, $300 is worth approximately £134.47 which is £0.08 more than you'd have got on 25 Nov.
These are the average New Zealand dollar buyback rates taken from our panel of UK travel money providers at the end of each day. You can explore this further on our New Zealand dollar to British pound currency chart.
No, you'll get more for your New Zealand dollars if you sell when the New Zealand dollar buyback rate is low. This is due to a quirk of how British currency providers display their buyback exchange rates.
When you buy New Zealand dollars, the exchange rate you get is the amount of New Zealand dollars you'll receive for every pound that you spend, so for example a rate of 2.2297 means you'd get $2.2297 for each £1 that you spend. You can calculate the total amount of New Zealand dollars you'd receive for a given amount of sterling by simply multiplying the sterling amount by the exchange rate.
When it comes to selling New Zealand dollars, the buyback rate is expressed in terms of how many New Zealand dollars you'd need to sell in order to get £1, so a buyback rate of 2.2297 means you'd need to sell $2.2297 to get £1. To calculate the sterling value of a given amount of New Zealand dollars, you need to divide the New Zealand dollar amount by the buyback rate. Since you're dividing by the buyback rate, a lower buyback rate means you'd get more sterling compared to a higher buyback rate.
One New Zealand dollar ($) can be subdivded into 100 cents (c). There are five denominations of New Zealand dollar banknotes in circulation: $5, $10, $20, $50 and $100; and five coin denominations: 10c, 20c, 50c, $1 and $2.
The current series of New Zealand dollar banknotes in circulation is the 'Series 7' or 'Brighter Money' series which was introduced by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand in 2015. Each banknote in the series features a prominent New Zealander on the obverse side and native New Zealand birds on the reverse side. For example, the $5 note depicts Sir Edmund Hillary; a renowned mountaineer and explorer, alongside a miro tree and a yellow-eyed penguin. The $10 note features Kate Sheppard; a prominent figure in the women's suffrage movement, and a whio (blue duck), while the highest denomination ($100) features Sir Ernest Rutherford, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist, on the obverse side, and a karearea (New Zealand falcon) on the reverse side.
Denomination | Sterling equivalent |
---|---|
$5 | £2.24 |
$10 | £4.48 |
$20 | £8.97 |
$50 | £22.42 |
$100 | £44.85 |
Denomination | Sterling equivalent |
---|---|
10c | £0.04 |
20c | £0.09 |
50c | £0.22 |
$1 | £0.45 |
$2 | £0.90 |