The quetzal (; code: GTQ) is the currency of Guatemala, named after the national bird of Guatemala, the resplendent quetzal. In ancient Mayan culture, the quetzal bird's tail feathers were used as currency. It is divided into 100 centavos, or len (plural lenes) in Guatemalan slang. The plural is quetzales.
History
The quetzal was introduced in 1925 during the term of President José María Orellana, whose image appears on the obverse of the one-quetzal bill. It replaced the Guatemalan peso at the rate of 60 pesos = 1 quetzal. Until 1987, the quetzal was pegged to and domestically equal to the United States dollar. The currency was named after the country's famous bird, the Quetzal, which is also on the flag of Guatemala.
Coins
thumb|400px|Coins of the quetzal
In 1925, coins in denominations of 1, 5, 10 centavos, , and 1 quetzal were introduced, although the majority of the 1 quetzal coins were withdrawn from circulation and melted. and 2 centavo coins were added in 1932. Until 1965, coins of 5 centavos and above were minted in 72% silver. and 1 quetzal coins were reintroduced in 1998 and 1999, respectively.
The coins currently in circulation are disc-shaped and include Guatemala's national coat of arms on the obverse.
- 50 centavos: Monja Blanca, the national flower
|-
!colspan=2| Image !!rowspan=2| Value !!rowspan=2| Main Color !!colspan=2| Description !!rowspan=2|Remark
|-
! Obverse !! Reverse !! Obverse !! Reverse
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan=2|200px
| Q1
| Green
| José María Orellana, President of Guatemala during the Currency Reform that introduced the Quetzal as the official currency.
| Main building of the Central Bank of Guatemala
| Reintroduced as a polymer banknote on August 20, 2007. A Commemorative paper note was introduced in 2024 to celebrate 100 years of the quetzal.
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan=2|200px
| Q5
| Violet
| Justo Rufino Barrios, Co-Leader of the Liberal Revolution of 1871.
| Education allegory
|Changed to a polymer banknote on November 14, 2011 Subsequently reintroduced on a cotton paper substrate.
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan=2|200px
| Q10
| Red
| Miguel García Granados, Deputy and Main Leader of the Liberal Revolution of 1871.
| Picture from the Guatemalan National Assembly of 1872
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan=2|200px
| Q20
| Blue
| Mariano Gálvez, State Leader of the State of Guatemala, within the United Provinces of Central America.
| Signing of the declaration of Central American independence
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan=2|200px
| Q50
| Orange
| , finance minister from 1923 to 1926
| Allegory of the importance of coffee to the country
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan=2|200px
| Q100
| Sepia
| Francisco Marroquín, First Bishop of the Realm of Guatemala, and Founder of the Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala
| First university building in Antigua Guatemala
|
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan=2|200px
| Q200
| Aqua
| Sebastian Hurtado, , . Three marimba composers.
| Allegory of the marimba, the national instrument, Musical score of La Flor del Café by Alcántara.
|A new version of the Q200 note was introduced in 2022 and features a SPARK security patch.
|-
|colspan=7|
|}
The Bank of Guatemala has introduced a polymer banknote of 1 quetzal on August 20, 2007, followed by a 5 quetzal polymer banknote on November 14, 2011. Both the 1 and 5 quetzal notes are once again on a paper substrate as of 2024.
Out of circulation
The fifty-cent quetzal bill is out of circulation, but it still has value.
{|class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%"
|+Fifty-Cent Quetzal Banknote
|-
!colspan=2| Image !!rowspan=2| Value !!rowspan=2| Main Color !!colspan=2| Description !!rowspan=2|Remark
|-
! Obverse !! Reverse !! Obverse !! Reverse
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan=2|200px
| Q0.50
| Brown
| Tecún Umán, Prince and Commander-and-Chief of the Quiche Realm during the Spanish Conquest.
| Tikal's Temple I
| No longer in circulation
|-
|colspan=7|
|}
Exchange rate
See also
- Economy of Guatemala
References
External links
- Banco de Guatemala
- Images of Guatemalan coins from the Banco de Guatemala page
- Banco de Guatemala currency in circulation
- The banknotes of Guatemala
