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Won

(Redirected from North Korean won)
For other uses, see Won (disambiguation).
Won
Korean Name
Revised Romanization Won
McCune-Reischauer Wŏn
Hangul
Hanja

Won (pronounced like English "one", or "won" past tense of "win") is the official currency used in both South Korea and North Korea. Their exchange values differ, however.

Full names Symbols Abbr.
North Korean won ₩n or Wn KPW
South Korean won ₩ or W  KRW

Historically, North and South Korean won have been divided into 100 jeon (전; 錢; McCune-Reischauer: chŏn; Revised Romanization: jeon; in North Korea, it is also Romanized jun). Jeon are no longer used in South Korea, as the smallest amount of money that typically changes hands is 100 Won, or roughly 10 US cents.

The word jeon is also used in Korean to translate the word "cent," and in this context accompanies bul (불, 弗), which means "dollar." (The hanja character resembles the symbol "$".) These two words are used by Koreans living in the Western hemisphere when referring to dollar currencies.

Table of contents

Exchange rates

Sampled on May 10, 2005.

North Korean won

Official exchange rates as of December, 2002

Coins in circulation are

  • 1 Jeon
  • 5 Jeon
  • 10 Jeon
  • 50 Jeon
  • 1 Won

Banknotes in circulation are

  • 1 Won (Woman holding a flower, 1992 series)
  • 5 Won (Students with a globe, 1992 series)
  • 10 Won (Factory worker and the Chollima statue, 1992 series)
  • 50 Won (The People and the Tower of Juche, 1992 series)
  • 100 Won (Kim Il Sung, 1992 series)
  • 200 Won (flowers)
  • 500 Won (Palace of the Memory of Kumsusan, 1998 series)
  • 1000 Won (Kim Il Sung, 2002 series)
  • 5000 Won (Kim Il Sung, 2002 series)

Unusually, the 100, 1000 and 5000 won bills are of essentially the same basic design, portraying the exact same subjects (although they are colored differently). North Korea has in the past issued whole series of notes in which the designs are exactly the same, right down to color, only the denomination being different.

South Korean won

South Korean coins
Won banknotes

Coins currently in circulation are [1]

  • 1 Won (Rose of Sharon, Aluminum)
  • 5 Won (Kobukson, Turtle ship, 65% copper, 35% zinc)
  • 10 Won (Dabotab, Pagoda, 65% copper, 35% zinc)
  • 50 Won (Stalk of rice, 70% copper, 18% zinc, 12% nickel)
  • 100 Won (Admiral Yi Sun-sin, 75% copper, 25% nickel)
  • 500 Won (Crane, 75% copper, 25% nickel)

Banknotes in circulation are

Strangely enough, the numerical denominations of won bills and coins are almost exactly the same as those of the Japanese yen, even though the yen is worth about nine times as much as the won. But, although these ranges of denominations work just fine for the yen (in which case they're very similar to the denominations of the U.S. dollar in circulation), they seem rather undervalued for the won, especially to American servicemen and Japanese visitors. Thus, the highest valued bill, the 10,000 won note, is worth only $10, while the lowest valued coin is worth only 0.1 U.S. cent. This is a holdover from when the Japanese and South Korean currencies had similar values; however, they have sinced diverged, with the yen strengthening and the won weakening. South Koreans often use electronic means of payment and credit cards to get around this problem with their cash. Also, 100,000 won bank checks (supyo) are used for large purchases and are dispensed from many ATMs.

See also

External Links



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Currencies of Asia and the Pacific
Central Afghan Afghani | Kazakstani Tenge | Kyrgyzstani Som | Mongolian Tugrug | Russian Ruble | Tajikistani Somoni | Turkmenistani Manat | Uzbekistani Som
East Chinese Renminbi | (Hong Kong dollar) | Japanese Yen | (Macanese Pataca) | North Korean Won | South Korean Won | Taiwan Dollar
South-East Brunei dollar | Cambodian Riel | Indonesian Rupiah | Laos Kip | Malaysian ringgit | Myanmar Kyat | Philippine peso | Singapore dollar | Thai Baht | US Dollar (East Timor) | Vietnamese dong
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