Euro to Libyan Dinar exchange rate

Summary EUR/LYD today

1 € = LD 7.4000
1 LD = € 0.1351 -0,15%
Last updated: 2026/06/04 17:45 GMT

Convert between Euros and Libyan Dinars

 €
=
LD
1.2000
Flip currencies

Euro to Libyan Dinar historical chart

6.06.57.07.5Jun 25Aug 25Oct 25Dec 25Feb 26Apr 26Jun 261 Euro in Libyan Dinar
Time period:

1 year or Since 2019

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Top 5 biggest currency moves against the Euro over the last 7 days

Currency
Zambian Kwacha (ZMW)
0.0463 €0.0491 €+6.04%
Colombian Peso (COP)
0.0002349 €0.0002403 €+2.34%
Mauritanian Ouguiya (MRU)
0.0215 €0.0217 €+1.27%
Nigerian Naira (NGN)
0.0006 €0.0006 €+1.24%
Fijian Dollar (FJD)
0.3862 €0.3907 €+1.13%
South Korean Won (KRW)
0.0006 €0.0006 €-2.29%
Silver (oz)
2.0949 €2.0467 €-2.5%
Belarusian Ruble (BYN)
0.3128 €0.3044 €-2.7%
Russian Ruble (RUB)
0.0121 €0.0117 €-3.21%
Bitcoin (BTC)
62,985 €54,165 €-13.71%
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About Libyan Dinar

Currency nameLibyan Dinar
SymbolLD
Also known asLYD, Libyan Dinar, 1 LD = 1000 dirham
ISO codeLYD
Banknotes1, 5, 10, 20, 50 LD
Coins100, 500 dirham; 1/4, 1/2 LD
Central bankCentral Bank of Libya - Website: www.cbl.gov.ly
Countries1 country: Libya (capital: Tripoli, major cities: Tripoli, Benghazi, Misrata)
Population7 mil.

History

The Libyan dinar (LYD) is the official currency of Libya, a nation whose monetary history reflects dramatic transformations from Italian colonial rule through monarchy, revolution and civil war. The word "dinar" derives from the Roman denarius via Arabic, used across the Islamic world since the early caliphates.

Italy colonised Libya from 1911 to 1943, imposing the Italian lira. After World War II, Libya was administered separately by Britain (Tripolitania and Cyrenaica) and France (Fezzan). The United Kingdom of Libya, established in 1951, introduced the Libyan pound. When Muammar Gaddafi overthrew the monarchy in 1969, he renamed the currency the dinar the following year.

Libya's vast oil reserves, discovered in 1959, made it one of Africa's wealthiest nations per capita under Gaddafi's rule. The dinar was maintained at an artificially high exchange rate through oil revenue and capital controls. Gaddafi's erratic economic policies, which alternated between socialism, nationalisation, and partial liberalisation, created inefficiencies but oil revenues masked the dysfunction.

The 2011 NATO-backed uprising that overthrew Gaddafi plunged Libya into civil war and fragmented political authority. Multiple governments and armed factions have controlled different parts of the country, severely disrupting the banking system and currency management. The Central Bank of Libya has struggled to function normally, and parallel exchange rates reflect the continued political instability.

Sources:

"Libyan dinar", Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libyan_dinar

"Central Bank of Libya", Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Bank_of_Libya