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Lao kip

Currency of Laos

Lao kip

Summary

Currency of Laos

FieldValue
nameLao kip
local_name1ເງີນກີບລາວ
Ngoenkib Lav
local_name_lang1lo
iso_codeLAK
iso_commentbefore 1980:
image_1[[File:1000 Laotian kip in 2003 Obverse.jpg300 px]] [[File:1000 Laotian kip in 2003 Reverse.jpg300 px]]
image_title_11000 kip issued in 2003
using_countriesLAO Lao People's Democratic Republic
inflation_rate4%
inflation_source_dateBank of the Lao P.D.R, October 2025.
subunit_ratio_1
subunit_name_1att
symbol₭ or ₭N
rarely_used_coins10 att, 20 att, 50 att
frequently_used_banknotes1,000₭, 2,000₭, 5,000₭, 10,000₭, 20,000₭, 50,000₭, 100,000₭
rarely_used_banknotes1₭, 5₭, 10₭, 20₭, 50₭, 100₭, 500₭, 100,000₭ (commemorative)
issuing_authorityBank of the Lao P.D.R.
issuing_authority_website

Ngoenkib Lav

The kip (; code: LAK; sign: or ₭N; ; officially: ເງີນກີບລາວ, lit. "currency Lao kip") is the currency of Laos since 1953. Historically, one kip was divided into 100 att (ອັດ) which are no longer in regular use. The term derives from ກີບ kì:p, a Lao word meaning "ingot."

History

French Indochina

Main article: French Indochinese piastre

The piastre was the currency of French Indochina between 1885 and 1952.

Free Lao Kip (1946)

In 1945–1946, the Free Lao government in Vientiane issued a series of paper money in denominations of 10, 20, and 50 att and 10 kip before the French authorities took control of the region.

Royal Kip (1953)

The kip was reintroduced in 1953, replacing the French Indochinese piastre at par. The kip (also called a piastre in French) was sub-divided into 100 att (Lao: ອັດ) or cents (French: Centimes). It was pegged to the French franc at a rate of 10 francs per kip.

On 10 October 1958, the kip's peg switched to the US dollar, and was officially devalued from ₭35 to ₭80 per US dollar: however, the official exchange rate did not reflect market conditions at the time, with the parallel rate reaching ₭600 per dollar by the end of 1963. Laos devalued the kip again on 1 January 1964, and adopted an official rate of ₭240 per dollar and a "free market" rate of about ₭505 per dollar: the free market rate then fell to ₭600 per dollar on 8 November 1971, with the official rate being abolished on 4 April 1972.

Pathet Lao Kip (1976)

The Pathet Lao introduced the "liberation kip" on 12 October 1968, for circulation in the areas that the group controlled. Banknotes for the liberation kip, which were printed in China, consisted of ₭1, ₭10, ₭20, ₭50, ₭100, ₭200 and ₭500.

According to the Pathet Lao's media outlet Siang Pasason, one liberation kip was worth 6 royal kip on 20 August 1975, three days before the Pathet Lao entered Vientiane. Based on historic exchange rates provided by the International Monetary Fund, one US dollar in 1975 was worth 725 royal kip or 120.83 liberation kip.

In 1976, the new communist Laotian government replaced the royal kip with the liberation kip. The exchange rate was 20 royal kip per liberation kip. A currency confiscation was carried out, where individuals could exchange up to 100,000 royal kip for liberation kip, and businesses up to one million royal kip; they had to deposit the rest in state-owned banks.

{{anchor|LAK}}Lao PDR Kip (1979)

On 16 December 1979, the former Pathet Lao "liberation kip" was replaced by the new Lao kip at a rate of 100 to 1.

Coins

Royal Kip (1952)

Coins were issued in denominations of 10, 20 and 50 att or cents with French and Lao inscriptions. All were struck in aluminum and had a hole in the centre, like the Chinese cash coins. The only year of issue was 1952.

Lao PDR Kip (1979)

Coins were again issued in Laos for the first time in 28 years in 1980 with denominations of 10, 20 and 50 att, with each being struck in aluminum and depicting the state emblem on the obverse and agricultural themes on the reverse. These were followed by commemorative 1, 5, 10, 20 and 50 kip coins issued in 1985 for the 10th anniversary of the establishment of the Lao People's Democratic Republic. However, due to the economic toll of the Soviet collapse in 1991 and the persistence of chronic inflation, coins are rarely seen in circulation.

ObverseReverseValueObverseReverseCompositionDate of issue
[[File:10_Laotian_att_in_1980_Obverse.jpg50x50px]][[File:10_Laotian_att_in_1980_Reverse.jpg50x50px]]10 attValue, farmerEmblem of Laos (1975-1991 version)Aluminum1980
[[File:20_Laotian_att_in_1980_Obverse.jpg50x50px]][[File:20_Laotian_att_in_1980_Reverse.jpg51x51px]]20 attValue, farmer ploughing with ox
[[File:50_Laotian_att_in_1980_Obverse.jpg50x50px]][[File:50_Laotian_att_in_1980_Reverse.jpg50x50px]]50 attValue, fish

Banknotes

100 kip, 1957 issue

In 1953, the Laos branch of the Institut d'Emission des États du Cambodge, du Laos et du Vietnam issued notes dual denominated in piastre and kip. At the same time, the two other branches had similar arrangements with the riel in Cambodia and the đồng in South Vietnam. There were notes for 1, 5, 10 and 100 kip/piastres.

In 1957, the government issued notes denominated solely in kip. The notes were for 1, 5, 10, 20 and 50 kip printed by the Security Banknote Company, 100 kip printed by the Banque de France and a commemorative 500 kip printed by De La Rue. 1 and 5 kip notes printed by Bradbury & Wilkinson, as well as 10 kip notes by De La Rue were introduced in 1962.

In 1963, 20, 50, 200 and 1000 kip notes were added, all printed by De La Rue. These were followed by 100, 500 and 5000 kip notes in 1974–75, again by De La Rue. 10 kip notes by Bradbury & Wilkinson and 1000 kip notes by De La Rue were printed but not circulated.

Pathet Lao Kip (1976)

Banknotes issued in 1975 or before in Pathet Lao controlled areas, and were in denominations of 1, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 kip.

Lao PDR Kip (1979)

In 1979, banknotes were introduced in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100 kip. 500 kip notes were added in 1988, followed by 1000 kip in 1992, 2000 and 5000 kip in 1997, 10,000 and 20,000 kip in 2002 and 50,000 kip on January 17, 2006 (although dated 2004). On November 15, 2010, a 100,000 kip banknote was issued to commemorate the 450th anniversary of the founding of the capital, Vientiane, and the 35th anniversary of the establishment of the Lao People's Democratic Republic. Kaysone Phomvihane (1920–1992) is pictured on the obverse of the 2,000, 5,000, 10,000, 20,000, 50,000, and 100,000 kip banknotes.

The Bank of Laos governor announced on January 25, 2012, that the Bank of Laos would issue 100,000 Kip banknotes as a regular issue on February 1, 2012 (but dated 2011) to encourage Lao people to use the national currency instead of U.S. dollars and Thai baht. As of 2019, the ₭500 note is the smallest one commonly in circulation.

Current SeriesImageValueDescriptionDate of issueObverseReverseObverseReverse
[[File:1 Laotian kip in 1979 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:1 Laotian kip in 1979 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭1Militia unit at left, arms at upper right.Classroom at left.1979
[[File:5 Laotian kip in 1979 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:5 Laotian kip in 1979 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭5ShoppingElephant-logging
[[File:10 Laotian kip in 1979 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:10 Laotian kip in 1979 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭10Lumber mill at left, arms at upper right.Hospital at left.
[[File:20 Laotian kip in 1979 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:20 Laotian kip in 1979 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭20Arms at left, tank with troop column at center.Textile mill at center.
[[File:50 Laotian kip in 1979 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:50 Laotian kip in 1979 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭50Rice-plantingHydroelectric dam
[[File:100 Laotian kip in 1979 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:100 Laotian kip in 1979 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭100HarvestingBridge
[[File:500 Laotian kip in 1988 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:500 Laotian kip in 1988 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭500IrrigationCoffee bean harvesting1988
2015
₭1,000Women from the three major ethnic groups of Laos: Lao Lum, Lao Sung and Lao Theung, with Pha That Luang in the background.Cattle herd1992-1996
[[File:1000 Laotian kip in 2003 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:1000 Laotian kip in 2003 Reverse.jpg200 px]]1998-2020
2008
₭2,000President Kaysone Phomvihane (1920–1992), Pha That LuangHydroelectric complex in Xeset1997-2003
[[File:2000 Laotian kip in 2011 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:2000 Laotian kip in 2011 Reverse.jpg200 px]]President Kaysone Phomvihane (1920–1992), Wat Xieng Thong in Luang Prabang2011
[[File:5000 Laotian kip in 2003 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:5000 Laotian kip in 2003 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭5,000President Kaysone Phomvihane; Pha That LuangCement factory in Vang Vieng1997-2003
2020
[[File:10000 Laotian kip in 2002 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:10000 Laotian kip in 2002 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭10,000Lao-Nippon bridge2002-2003
2020
[[File:20000 Laotian kip in 2003 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:20000 Laotian kip in 2003 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭20,000President Kaysone Phomvihane; Wat Xieng Thong TempleTheun Hinboun hydroelectric power plant2002-2003
President Kaysone Phomvihane; Pha That Luang2020
[[File:50000 Laotian kip in 2004 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:50000 Laotian kip in 2004 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭50,000Presidential Palace2004
2020
[[File:100000 Laotian kip in 2011 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:100000 Laotian kip in 2011 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭100,000date=July 2025bot=InternetArchiveBotfix-attempted=yes}} in Vientiane2011
[[File:100.000 Laotian kip in 2020 Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:100.000 Laotian kip in 2020 Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭100,000Viengxay Caves in Houaphanh Province2020
Commemorative BanknotesImageValueDescriptionDate of issueSeries DesignationObverseReverseObverseReverse
[[File:100000 Laotian kip in 2010 450th Aniversary of Founding of Vientiane & 35th Anniversary of PDR of Laos Obverse.jpg200 px]][[File:100000 Laotian kip in 2010 450th Aniversary of Founding of Vientiane & 35th Anniversary of PDR of Laos Reverse.jpg200 px]]₭100,000Statue of King Setthathirath, Pha That Luang, Dok Champa flower and Nāga.Haw Phra Kaew Temple2010P-40

Lao kip exchange rate

DateUS Dollar
exchange rate20 Jan 2026
1 September 19971,021
1 September 19983,408
1 September 19997,680
1 September 20007,527
3 September 20017,600
2 September 20027,562
1 September 20037,562
1 December 20047,842
1 September 200510,380
1 September 200610,033
3 September 20079,580
1 September 20088,500
1 September 20098,477
1 September 20108,100
1 September 20118,000
3 September 20127,968
2 September 20137,838
1 September 20148,034
1 September 20158,135
1 September 20168,088
30 July 20178,300
30 July 20188,402
4 January 20198,550.97
1 September 20208,906.86
1 September 20219,354.13
1 September 202215,186.4
12 May 202215,505.80
20 February 202420,800
21,594.44

References

References

  1. "Definition of KIP".
  2. (June 19, 2004). "Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary: Eleventh Edition". Merriam-Webster.
  3. Howard A. Daniel, III. (2018). "The Catalog and Guidebook of Southeast Asian Coins and Currency. Volume I: France". H.A. Daniel.
  4. (1972). "Basic Data on the Economy of Laos". U.S. Department of Commerce.
  5. (24 May 2019). "The Banknote Book". Owen Linzmayer.
  6. (20 August 1975). "Economic progress made since liberation". Joint Publications Research Service.
  7. (2021). "Official exchange rate (LCU per US$, period average)". The World Bank.
  8. (2012). "The Banknote Book". www.BanknoteNews.com.
  9. "Laos".
  10. "Laos - Banknote News".
  11. [http://banknotenews.com/files/ad20ba6af5af0ac0d06f2b58a5a2398f-1332.php Laos new 100,000-kip commemorative confirmed] BanknoteNews.com. Retrieved 2012-01-31
  12. "Archived copy".
  13. "Lao central bank to issue new 100,000-kip notes - The Nation".
  14. "Archived copy".
  15. [http://banknotenews.com/files/5aa391c2817b9991d263574b4ab02524-1952.php Laos new 100,000 kip note confirmed] BanknoteNews.com. Retrieved 2012-02-03.
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