Andorra did not have an official currency before adopting the euro, and unlike its two larger neighbours,
France and
Spain, which surround it, it is not a member of the EU. In the 20th century, both the
French franc and
Spanish peseta were used and accepted in Andorra, but the peseta was more widespread with government budgets, salaries and bank deposits mostly being in pesetas. When those two currencies were replaced by the euro between 1999 and 2002, the euro became the sole currency in Andorra. Unlike the three other
European microstates outside of the EU,
Monaco,
San Marino and the
Vatican City, which adopted the euro when it was introduced, Andorra did not conclude a monetary agreement with the EU but rather used it unilaterally. These agreements gave the three microstates the right to issue their own
euro coins, which have a common design on one side, and a national-specific side on the other. As with coins minted in other eurozone states, the microstate coins are valid across the eurozone; however they do not gain representation on the euro's governing bodies, the
European Central Bank (ECB) and the
Eurogroup. In 2003 Andorra requested that the EU conclude a monetary agreement with it which would give it the right to mint its own coins. == Currency agreements ==