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Old One Pound Coins

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Khandro | 15:03 Fri 06th Oct 2017 | Business & Finance
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Soon to become no longer legal tender;
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/consumer-affairs/does-old-1-coin-go-circulation/
We have a few here in Germany and can't spend them. I wonder if the bank will exchange them before the deadline, or what?
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If you can pay them in, then do so and save bother later.
Don't the banks take them after the deadline?

I owe my daughter £35. I have 5 old pound coins :-)
I think the banks will continue to accept them til early next year, but am not 100% sure on that.
I am probably not up-to-date on these things but currency, notes and coins, that is withdrawn usually ceases to be acceptable in general circulation at a given date and then for some time afterwards the banks will take it in exchange for valid currency and return the withdrawn one to the issuer for an equal credit - or at least that was the case. The "post legal tender" option was never well publicised, possibly because they want to frighten people into getting rid of the things in order not to have much left to clear. Not to allow any adjustment period past the withdrawal date would be extremely harsh, not least to holders outside the country who could easily be totally oblivious to something "everybody knows" (in the UK bubble). Until recently, retail banks would confirm that after the withdrawal date they would continue (for some time) accepting old currency for deposit and/or conversion. In fact, I know someone who last April arrived in the UK with a not insignificant number of withdrawn-type £50 notes. He got them exchanged through a very UK-esque rigmarole with a 2% markdown, if I remember correctly, so withdrawn currency is certainly not instantly worthless.
Although you can return out of date notes to the Bank of England, after completing the correct forms, and get benefit for them it is not the same for coins. The day they stop being legal tender that is it. Banks will allow customers to pay them into their accounts for some time after, but each Bank can set it's own time limit. There is no legal requirement for them to do so.
There is no arrangement with the Royal Mint for coins as there is with the BoE for notes.

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