Monday, April 20, 2026 - The Turkish Lira is experiencing heightened concerns amid geopolitical tensions affecting investor sentiment, with analysts forecasting further volatility. Market participants are closely monitoring Turkey's central bank actions as interest rate decisions play a critical role in currency stabilization efforts. Additionally, economic data releases are providing mixed signals, generating discussion around the Lira's future trajectory in the context of domestic and global economic conditions.
| Currency | 04/13/2026 | 04/20/2026 | Change | |
| Silver (oz) | 2.0318 € | ⇨ | 2.193 € | +7.92% |
| Bitcoin (BTC) | 61,576 € | ⇨ | 63,991 € | +4.43% |
| Gold Sovereign | 948.02 € | ⇨ | 966.02 € | +1.89% |
| Gold (oz) | 129.47 € | ⇨ | 131.93 € | +1.89% |
| Egyptian Pound (EGP) | 0.0161 € | ⇨ | 0.0163 € | +1.87% |
| Iraqi Dinar (IQD) | 0.0007 € | ⇨ | 0.0006 € | -0.55% |
| Algerian Dinar (DZD) | 0.0065 € | ⇨ | 0.0064 € | -0.55% |
| Turkish Lira (TRY) | 0.0191 € | ⇨ | 0.0189 € | -0.85% |
| Yemeni Rial (YER) | 0.0036 € | ⇨ | 0.0036 € | -1.12% |
| Ukrainian Hryvnia (UAH) | 0.0197 € | ⇨ | 0.0192 € | -2.17% |
| See also the 24h, 30d and 1y changes | ||||
| Currency name | Turkish Lira |
| Symbol | ₺ |
| Also known as | TRY, Turkish Lira, ₺1 = 100 kuruş |
| ISO code | TRY |
| Banknotes | ₺5, ₺10, ₺20, ₺50, ₺100, ₺200 |
| Coins | 1, 5, 10, 25, 50 kuruş; ₺1 |
| Central bank | Central Bank of the Republic of Türkiye (CBRT) - Website: www.tcmb.gov.tr |
| Countries | 1 country: Turkey/Türkiye (capital: Ankara, major cities: Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Bursa, Adana) |
| Population | 84 mil. |
History
The Turkish lira's roots trace back to the Ottoman period, when the currency of the Ottoman Empire shared its name — lira — with many European currencies derived from the Latin libra. The Ottoman lira was introduced in 1844 as part of the Tanzimat modernisation reforms. Like other currencies of the era it was tied to gold and silver.
When the Republic of Turkey was established in 1923, the Turkish lira replaced the Ottoman lira at parity. For much of the 20th century, chronic fiscal deficits, political instability, and import-substitution policies caused persistent inflation. The lira lost value against the dollar decade after decade, a trend that accelerated sharply from the 1970s onward.
By the 1990s and early 2000s, inflation had reached triple digits and the lira had depreciated so severely that everyday transactions required millions of lira. A bold monetary reform in January 2005 redenominated the currency: the new Turkish lira (YTL) replaced the old at 1,000,000 to 1. The word "new" was dropped in 2009.
Following a serious banking and currency crisis in 2001, Turkey adopted an IMF-backed reform programme and achieved relative monetary stability through the mid-2000s. However, renewed political pressure on the central bank and unconventional interest rate policies from 2018 onward triggered another severe depreciation. By 2023, the lira had lost over 90% of its value compared to 2018 levels. The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey manages monetary policy.
Sources:
"Turkish lira", Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_lira
"2021 Turkish currency and debt crisis", Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Turkish_currency_and_debt_crisis