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Currencies/Niuean dollar

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Revision as of 04:40, 22 November 2025 by Hamzasaddiq (talk | contribs) (The Niuean dollar is Niue’s legal-tender unit pegged 1:1 to the New Zealand dollar and used mainly for official coin issues. It follows the same decimal structure—1 dollar = 100 cents—and represents Niue’s monetary identity within its association with New Zealand.)
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Introduction

The Niuean dollar is a legal-tender currency unit issued for Niue, a self-governing island in free association with New Zealand. It is pegged at par to the New Zealand dollar and used mainly for officially issued coinage.


History

Niue began producing its own legal-tender coinage from 1966, following the New Zealand monetary structure. After New Zealand adopted the decimal system in 1967, Niue continued issuing coins aligned with the New Zealand dollar at a fixed rate of 1:1.


Coins

Colnect Item Picture

Coins issued in the Niuean dollar system follow the decimal structure and include denominations such as 10 cents, 20 cents, 50 cents, $1, and $2. These coins are produced under Niue’s authority, often sharing metal composition and specifications with New Zealand coinage, depending on the issuing mint and year.


Currency

The currency operates on a decimal basis

1 Niuean dollar = 100 cents

Its value and structure remain identical to the New Zealand dollar due to the fixed 1:1 relationship.


Legacy

The Niuean dollar reflects Niue’s monetary identity within its administrative arrangement with New Zealand. The coinage highlights Niue’s continued participation in modern Pacific currency systems through officially recognized legal-tender issues.


See Also