Lebanese pound

Lebanese pound
ISO 4217
CodeLBP (numeric: 422)
Subunit0.01
SymbolNone official. The abbreviation LL or ل.ل. is used
Denominations
Subunit
1100piastre
Banknotes
 Freq. usedLL 5,000, LL 10,000, LL 20,000, LL 50,000, LL 100,000
 Rarely usedLL 1,000
Demographics
User(s) Lebanon
Issuance
Central bankBanque du Liban
 Websitewww.bdl.gov.lb
Valuation
Inflation16.09% (Jan 2025)
 Sourceblog.blominvestbank.com
Pegged withU.S. dollar note
note Dual exchange rate system (Sayrafa)

Lebanese pound or Lebanese lira is the currency of Lebanon. It was formerly divided into 100 piastres (Arabic: قرش qirsh) but, because of high inflation during the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990), subunits were discontinued.

The plural of lira is either lirat (ليرات līrāt) or invariant, whilst there are four forms for qirsh: the dual qirshān (قرشان) used with number 2, the plural qurush (قروش) used with numbers 3–10, the accusative singular qirshan (قرشًا) used with 11–99, and the genitive singular qirsh (قرش) used with multiples of 100. The number determines which plural form is used. All of Lebanon's coins and banknotes are bilingual in Arabic and French.

From December 1997 through January 2023, the exchange rate was fixed at LL 1,507.50 per US dollar. However, since the 2020 economic crisis in Lebanon, exchange at this rate was generally unavailable, and an informal currency market developed with much higher exchange rates. On 1 February 2023, the Central Bank reset the currency peg at LL 15,000 per US dollar. By mid-March 2023, the "parallel market" rate had fallen to LL 100,000 per dollar. On 19 December 2023, the Sayrafa rate (the rate the central bank redeems international credit and debit card payments) was established from LL 85,500 to LL 89,500 per US dollar. Most recently in 2025, the parallel market rate has stopped fluctuating to reach a rate of LL 89,500 per US dollar.