The modern kuna was introduced on 30 May 1994, starting a period of transition from the
Croatian dinar, introduced in 1991, which ended on 31 December 1994. One kuna was equivalent to 1,000 dinars at a fixed exchange rate. The kuna was pegged to the
Deutsche Mark from the start. With the replacement of the mark by the
euro, the kuna's peg effectively switched to the euro. The choice of the name
kuna was controversial because the same currency name had been used by the Independent State of Croatia, but this was dismissed as a
red herring, since the same name was also in use during the Banovina of Croatia and by the
State Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH). even though
Czechia and (until 2008)
Slovakia have used currencies whose names translate to "crown". A long-time policy of the Croatian National Bank was to keep the fluctuations of the kuna's exchange rate against the euro (or, previously, the mark) within a relatively stable range. Since the introduction of the euro in 1999, the exchange rate between the two currencies rarely fluctuated to a substantial degree, remaining at a near constant 7.5:1 (HRK to EUR) rate. Croatia
joined the European Union on 1 July 2013 and the
Exchange Rate Mechanism on 10 July 2020 at a rate of 7.53450 HRK to €1. The kuna was
replaced by the euro on 1 January 2023 after satisfying prerequisites as the initial time estimate of standard four years after joining the European Union proved too short. A two-week transition period during which kuna cash remained as legal tender in circulation alongside the euro ended on 14 January. Cash could be exchanged at any
Eurozone national central banks until 28 February and at any bank (Fina and
Hrvatska pošta in Croatia) until the end of 2023 at no charge. The Croatian National Bank will do the same for notes indefinitely and for coins until the end of 2025. == Coins ==