Sterling In 1825, an imperial order-in-council introduced
sterling coinage to Malta, replacing a system under which various coinages circulated, including that issued in Malta by the
Knights of St John. The pound was valued at 12
scudi of the local currency. This exchange rate meant that the smallest Maltese coin, the
grano, was worth one third of a
farthing (1 scudo = 20 tari = 240 grani). Consequently,
-farthing (-penny) coins were issued for use in Malta until 1913, alongside the regular sterling coinage. Amongst the British colonies which used sterling coinage, Malta was unique in issuing a -farthing coin. Between 1914 and 1918, wartime emergency paper money issues were made by the government. Until 1972, the pound was divided into 20
shillings, each of 12
pence with 4
farthings to the penny; from May 1972 it was decimalised into 100 cents, and each cent into 10 mils. Pre-decimal sterling coinage continued to circulate in Malta for nearly a year after it was withdrawn in the UK due to decimalisation as Malta did not decimalise until 1972. Although the Maltese pound was initially equal to its sterling counterpart, this parity did not survive long after the floating of sterling on 22 June 1972.
Banknotes Emergency issues between 1914 and 1918 were in denominations of 5 and 10 shillings, £1, £5 and £10. In 1940, notes dated 13 September 1939 in denominations of
2/6,
5/–, 10/– and £1 were issued, followed late in the year by a provisional 1/– note overprinted on old 2/– notes dated 20 November 1918. Note production continued after the
Second World War in denominations of 10/- and £1, with £5 notes reintroduced between 1961 and 1963. After the
Central Bank of Malta was established by the Central Bank Act of 1967 and began operating on April 17, 1968, Although exclusively using British coins at that time, Malta did not
decimalise with the
UK in 1971. Instead, decimalisation occurred a year later, on the "
pound and mil" system, dividing the pound into 1,000
mils and 100
cents. The Maltese name "lira" and the English name "pound" were used concurrently on banknotes until 1986, when "lira" became the official name of the currency in both languages. Mil denominated coins were removed from circulation in 1994. On entry into the European Union, Malta agreed to adopt the euro. The lira was replaced by the
euro on 1 January 2008, as part of the
Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union.
Euro changeover The Maltese lira was replaced by the
euro as the official currency of
Malta at the irrevocable fixed exchange rate of Lm 0.429300 per €1. However, Maltese lira banknotes and coins continued to have
legal tender status and were accepted for cash payments until 31 January 2008. Maltese lira were convertible free of charge at all Maltese credit institutions until 30 March 2008. Maltese coins were convertible at the
Central Bank of Malta until 1 February 2010, and banknotes remained convertible until 31 January 2018. ==Exchange rate==