Practical A–Z · Abschnitt 2/7

Money & Currency

🇵🇪 Peru Reiseführer

Practical A–Z|
PraktischMoney & Currency

Money & Currency

Peruvian Sol (PEN)

1 Sol = 100 Céntimos. Coins: 10, 20, 50 Céntimos, 1, 2, 5 Soles. Notes: 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 Soles.

Exchange rate (reference 2025): 1 EUR ≈ 4.0 PEN / 1 PEN ≈ 0.25 EUR

US Dollar or Sol?

Peru is partially dollarized: Hotels, travel agencies, and more expensive restaurants often accept US dollars (sometimes even prefer them). For everyday life, however, you need Soles. Tip: Exchange euros in Lima at the airport or at exchange offices (“Casas de Cambio”) — the rate is fair. In the city, street exchangers (“Cambistas” in safety vests) are often the cheapest option — but only in busy areas and check the notes carefully!

ATMs & Credit Cards

  • ATMs (ATM/Cajero): Available in all cities and tourist areas. BCP, BBVA, Interbank, and Scotiabank accept international cards. Maximum withdrawal: usually 400–700 PEN per transaction.
  • Fees: Peruvian banks charge 12–25 PEN (3–6€) per withdrawal! BCP and Interbank are the cheapest. Additionally, there are fees from your home bank.
  • Credit cards: Visa and Mastercard are accepted in hotels, upscale restaurants, and larger stores. American Express is rare. In local restaurants and markets: cash only!

💡 Tipp

Check EVERY banknote you receive! Counterfeit money (especially 50 and 100 Soles notes) is a problem in Peru. Hold the note up to the light: watermark, security thread, and color changes must be visible. When in doubt: refuse.

Achtung

DO NOT withdraw from ATMs on the street, especially not at night! Use ATMs in shopping centers, hotels, or bank branches. ATM fraud (skimming) occurs — cover the keypad when entering your PIN.

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