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Today's Currency Real / Dollar

Brazilian Currency
Since 1994, the Brazilian currency has been the Real (plural: Reais),
symbol is R$.
Because of the very high inflation rates which Brazil had in the 1980s
and early 1990s, the country had to change currency several times: Brazilians
were used to dealing with Cruzeiros until 1986; that year, an economic
plan cut three zeros from the bills and changed the currency to Cruzado;
a few years later, another three zeros were dropped, and Brazilians were
introduced to the Cruzados Novos ("new cruzados"). In 1990, the Cruzados
Novos were retired, and the Cruzeiros were back; in 1993, the Cruzeiros
lost another three zeros and were turned into Cruzeiros Reais.
In 1994, after the deployment of a new monetary plan, the new currency, called
Real, came to life. Read more about the Real
Plan, which preceeded the launching of the Real.
Since 1994, inflation has been maintained at civilized levels (2003, consumer
prices rose by about 8%; in 2005, the inflation target is around 6%), and the
Brazilian citizens had the chance, for the first time in a long period, to get
accostumed to a stable currency.
There are bills of R$1, R$2, R$5, R$10, R$20, R$50 and R$100; click
here to look at the bills. Formerly, the bills were illustrated with images
of Historic characters; problem was, however, that the high inflation caused
the bills to loose value too fast, and what was supposed to be a hommage turned
into a mockery. Nowadays, the bills are illustrated with images of Brazilian
animals (the feminine character on one side of all bills is a representation
of the Republic).
Coins exist in values of 1 cent (R$0.01), 5 cents, 10 cents, 25 cents, 50 cents
and 1 Real. Coins vary in size and color. Since the release of the Real, some
coins were discontinued; click the links to check out the Brazilian
coins in course.
The currencies market
Differently from most countries, Brazilians are not used to seeing foreigner
currency bills; even the American dollar and the euro have limited course; traveller
checks are also restricted (usually, foreigners must exchange the currency before
paying their bills, in Reais). Brazilians have no authorization to have bank
accounts in dollar; Brazilian firms (including hotels) must provide invoices
and receipts in Reais.
Currency exchange businesses exist in all major cities. "Casas de Cambio" are
establishments that deal only with currencies; a few branches of a few banks
also trade currencies, but not at an advantageous rate to the customer.
Brazilian banks have developed an efficient
Information Technology infrastructure; holders of major credit cards can use
Brazilian ATMs to access their accounts and withdraw cash (other transactions
are limited).
Click the link to check out the exchange
rate of dollar against Real for the past years.

1 Real - R$ 1.00


2 Reais - R$ 2.00
 
5 Reais - R$ 5.00
10 Reais - R$ 10.00
 
20 Reais - R$ 20.00
 
50 Reais - R$ 50.00
 
100 Reais - R$ 100.00 
Need to know more about the Brazilian money ?
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