Convert 15 Danish Krone (DKK) to Indonesian Rupiah (IDR)
Exchange rates used for currency conversion updated on December 03rd 2024 ( 12/03/2024 )
Below you will find the latest exchange rates for exchanging Danish Krone (DKK) to Indonesian Rupiah (IDR) , a table containing most common conversions and a chart with the pair's evolution.
The Danish Krone (DKK) to Indonesian Rupiah (IDR) rates are updated every minute using our advanced technology for live forex currency conversion. Check back in a few days for things to buy with this amount and information about where exactly you can exchange currencies online and offline.
The currency exchange rate, calculated between Danish Krone and Indonesian Rupiah on 12/03/2024 is 1 DKK = 2242.0826 IDR - AVERAGE intraday quotes were used for this currency conversion.
DKK is the code for the official currency of Denmark and Greenland which is known as the krone and symbolized with "kr". The Faroe Islands also use a version of the krone, but the islands have there own specially printed banknotes that trade at 1:1 par with the Danish krone. The Faroe Islands krone is under complete monetary control of the Danmarks Nationalbank. The krone itself is pegged in value to the euro. Each krone is subdivided into 100 øre.
The Danmarks Nationalbank issues the currency in denominated coins valued at 50 øre, 1kr, 2kr, 5kr, 10kr, and 20 kr with notes printed in 50kr, 100kr, 200kr, 500kr, and 1000 kr denominations. The Faroese króna is issued in 25 oyrur , 50 oyrur, 1kr, 2kr, 5kr, 10kr, and 20kr with notes in denominations of 50kr, 100kr, 200kr, 500kr, and1000kr.
About Indonesian Rupiah (IDR)
The Indonesian rupiah uses the international currency code of IDR, the written symbol of Rp, and is the official currency of Indonesia. Issued buy the Bank of Indonesia who mints the rupiah in denominations of Rp 50, Rp 100, Rp 200, Rp 500, and Rp 1000 and paper currency notes in denominations of Rp 1000, Rp 2000, Rp 5000, Rp 10,000, Rp 20,000, Rp 50,000, and Rp 100,000.
All currency issues of IDR prior to 1999 will no longer be accepted nor will they be legal tender after January 2018. The Bank of Indonesia is also considering eliminating the trailing three zeros in currency denominations, this move is not as a devaluation, but as a re-alignment of value assignment.