Banknotes
In 1886, the Aguan Navigation and Improvement Company issued its first paper money. The Banco Centro-Americano began note production in 1888, followed by the Honduran government in 1889, with several more banks issuing notes later. Denominations ranged between 50 centavos and 100 pesos.
|
Currencies named peso or similar
|
|
| Circulating |
- Argentine peso
- Chilean peso
- Colombian peso
- Cuban convertible peso
- Cuban peso
- Dominican peso (peso oro)
- Macanese pataca (圓)
- Mexican peso
- Philippine peso (piso)
- Uruguayan peso
|
|
| Obsolete |
- Argentine peso argentino
- Argentine peso ley
- Argentine peso moneda corriente
- Argentine peso moneda nacional
- Bolivian peso
- Catalan peseta (pesseta)
- Costa Rican peso
- Ecuadorian peso
- Equatorial Guinean peseta
- Guatemalan peso
- Guinea-Bissau peso
- Honduran peso
- Japanese government-issued Philippine fiat peso
- Nicaraguan peso
- Paraguayan peso
- Peruvian peseta
- Portuguese Timorese pataca
- Puerto Rican peso
- Sahrawi peseta
- Salvadoran peso
- Spanish peso
- Spanish peseta (pesseta, pezeta)
- Venezuelan peso
|
|
| See also |
- Peso sign
- Maltese pataca (coin)
|
|